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The Hakone Shrine (箱根神社, Hakone Jinja) is a Japanese Shinto shrine on the shores of Lake Ashi in the town of Hakone in the Ashigarashimo District of Kanagawa Prefecture. [1] It is also known as the Hakone Gongen ( 箱根権現 ) .
Gōra Hakone (箱根強羅, Hakone Gōra) Voiced by: Tomokazu Sugita [5] Yumoto's older brother, who helps run the bathhouse and chop wood for the baths. The finale of the first season reveals that he was the original Battle Lover. Kou Kinosaki (城崎コウ, Kinosaki Kō) Voiced by: Showtaro Morikubo [5] The president of the Binan High Press ...
Hakone Town Hall Mount Fuji from Mount Kami in the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. Hakone (箱根町, Hakone-machi) is a town in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.As of 1 October 2023, the town had a population of 10,965, [1] [2] and total area of 92.82 km 2 (35.84 sq mi).
Kuzuryū (九頭龍, nine-headed dragon), or Kuzuryūshin (九頭龍神, nine-headed dragon god) is a deity that appears in folklore and legends of various parts of Japan, including, for example, Hakone , Nagano Prefecture and Fukui Prefecture. In many cases, the Kuzuryū is associated with water.
Burning of the Character Big, on Mount Myojo, in the Hakone Mountains The Character Big, on Mount Nyoi, in Kyoto. The Burning of the Character "Big" (大), also known as Daimonjiyaki (Japanese: 大文字焼き) or Daimonji Festival is the Japanese Buddhist ritual of burning wood in the character "Big" (大), typically in the mountain, on the last day of the 4-day Bon Festival to send back to ...
The Hakone Barrier (箱根関, Hakone Seki) was a security checkpoint which was established by the Tokugawa Shogunate on the Tōkaidō highway connecting the capital of Edo with Kyoto in Edo period Japan. In 1923, the site was recognized as a National Historic Site. [1]
Onsen Yōsei Hakone-chan (温泉幼精ハコネちゃん, lit. Young Hot Spring Fairy Hakone-chan) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Daisuke Yui. It began serialization online via Flex Comix 's Comic Meteor website in 2012 and has since been collected into two tankōbon volumes.
Gongen shinkō (権現信仰) is the term for belief in the existence of gongen. [3] The gongen concept is the cornerstone of the honji suijaku theory, according to which Buddhist deities choose to appear to the Japanese as native kami in order to save them, which is based on the Mahayana Buddhist notion of upaya, "expedient means".