Dressed in original costumes and riding a white horse as the Shogun, the procession of 20 people, including extras, will parade through the Ōdono area, which retains the historical atmosphere to this day.
Afterward, the procession will move to Sansuien Garden, a National Registered Tangible Cultural Asset, where guests can enjoy Yamaguchi’s traditional performing arts and savor the Ōuchi Feast, faithfully recreated from the historical banquet.
Please enjoy Yamaguchi City, which has been selected by The New York Times as one of the “52 Places to Go in 2024.”
1-2-7 Tenge, Yamaguchi, Japan
Yamaguchi City Naikotei (Yamaguchi City Saikotei) is a sightseeing base in Yamaguchi, a city with a rich history, It was opened on October 2, 2004 as a sightseeing base for Yamaguchi City, which is rich in history, and as a place for citizen exchange. The building is a reconstruction of the Gion Sako-tei restaurant, which was widely popular from its establishment in 1877 until 1996. 29 flat plaques of famous people such as Kaoru Inoue and Eisaku Sato are on display, along with other related items.
119 Odonooji, Yamaguchi, Japan
This is the family temple of Ouchi Yoshitaka, which was rebuilt on the site of the Ouchi clan mansion. In autumn, visitors are welcomed by a tunnel of red maple trees lining both sides of the approach from the gate to the temple grounds.
o become a ryokan (Japanese inn), the building has since been extended to its present form. The postwar addition was designed by Kaichiro Fuefuki, a famous Kyoto sukiya (tea-ceremony house) master, and is filled with sukiya techniques and a playful spirit. Experts have described it as “like a museum of wooden architecture.
A guide with a JTB flag will welcome you at the entrance of Saikotei, Yamaguchi City.
All sales are final. No refund is available for cancellations.
Parcourez Yamaguchi Prefecture par catégorie - billets coupe-file, visites à pied, excursions d'une journée, expériences culinaires et plus