Explore near Guanshuen no Chi Monument: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Guanshuen no Chi Monument Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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and we're here to end it.
Original Text
To that extent, go to "Guan End Land"! The location is a few minutes north of the Edocho intersection on the Kyoto Outer Loop Line. Amada Guan is a poet from Fukushima Prefecture from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period, and his real name is Goro Amada. He moved around the country for many years 々 Entering Tenryuji Temple and creating Waka and Chinese poetry. The masterpiece is "Tokai Yukyoden". In this area, there is a stone monument that lived in 1901 and ended the Guan. It is located in a quiet place in a residential area, and if you climb this road further, you will find the Meiji Emperor Mausoleum etc. ...
It is a monument derived from Guan Amada, a poet from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji era. There were only small halls and small monuments on the side of the road in a residential area, and if I didn't know it, I would have missed it. Next to the monument was a Kosatsu type explanation board by Kyoto City. It was stated that the Soan in this area was relocated and restored to Iwaki City, which was born in 1966.
and we're here to end it.
To that extent, go to "Guan End Land"! The location is a few minutes north of the Edocho intersection on the Kyoto Outer Loop Line. Amada Guan is a poet from Fukushima Prefecture from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period, and his real name is Goro Amada. He moved around the country for many years 々 Entering Tenryuji Temple and creating Waka and Chinese poetry. The masterpiece is "Tokai Yukyoden". In this area, there is a stone monument that lived in 1901 and ended the Guan. It is located in a quiet place in a residential area, and if you climb this road further, you will find the Meiji Emperor Mausoleum etc. ...
A small monument by the road.
It is a monument derived from Guan Amada, a poet from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji era. There were only small halls and small monuments on the side of the road in a residential area, and if I didn't know it, I would have missed it. Next to the monument was a Kosatsu type explanation board by Kyoto City. It was stated that the Soan in this area was relocated and restored to Iwaki City, which was born in 1966.