Explore near Jippotei Ishinkan: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Jippotei Ishinkan Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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16 Reviews
bakera73
they said that celebrities visited at the end of the Edo period.
Original Text
Juhotei was built as a separation from the Mandai family, which was trading soy sauce. In this Juhotei Ishinkan, the main building, Juhotei, Sugi Private School, and Mandai landlord were crowded. It was a new building that hadn't been rebuilt since then. The head of the Mandai family seems to support the activities of the scholars around the end of the Edo period. Therefore, it seems that there are records of Kogoro Katsura, Shinsaku Takasugi, Kaoru Inoue, Hirofumi Ito, etc. visited here.
Next to the south of Ryufukuji Temple, there was the Juhotei Ishinkan. There are several small buildings on the premises. Juhotei was built as a separation from the Bandai family, which is a family business of soy sauce 々. At the end of the Edo period, it became an accommodation for officials of the clan, and the head of the clan, Ribei Mandai, supported the activities of the priests, so it seems that the priests of the Meiji Restoration, such as Kogoro Katsura and Shinsaku Takasugi, visited here.
it seems to be one of the remains of the meiji era.
Original Text
It was an old building that I didn't like. The exhibition facilities in the new building were charged (1 Person 200 yen for high school students and above). It seems that this is one of the remains of the Meiji Restoration and is also worthwhile as a private house building in the Edo period. Personally, I was born and lived in a huge country house of 180 years after construction, so I don't feel any charm for old and functionally inferior houses. This is a city-designated cultural property. It was built as a distance from the house where soy sauce was made.
A quick understanding of the history of Yamaguchi city during the Meiji Restoration
Original Text
There is a charge for the exhibition facility that is a historical museum. However, it was meaningful to be able to understand the history of Yamaguchi Prefecture and Yamaguchi City during the Meiji Restoration with exhibit materials such as a diorama of 6 and a half minutes. There was also an exhibition about sightseeing points in Yamaguchi City, and when I was hitting my head, the staff gave me paper materials, which was helpful later. In addition to the museum, the distance where the old main house and the distinguished people of the Meiji Restoration stayed was preserved. I'm glad I went up freely. In addition, the parking point of the toilet and bicycle ...
On a hot day in the latter half of August, I happened to find it while walking on the road in front of me. I'm not particularly interested in the end of the Edo period or the Meiji Restoration, but I naturally headed inside to get a little cooler. When you enter the gate, you will see a new exhibition hall on your left and an old Japanese-style house that seems to be a historic site on your right. The reception is in the new building and you will pay an admission fee of 200 yen. The person in the hall is low-key and polite, and he has a great liking. When asked when it was made, it was 2018. First, go to the left hand and enter the exhibition room. Not large, but ...
they said that celebrities visited at the end of the Edo period.
Juhotei was built as a separation from the Mandai family, which was trading soy sauce. In this Juhotei Ishinkan, the main building, Juhotei, Sugi Private School, and Mandai landlord were crowded. It was a new building that hadn't been rebuilt since then. The head of the Mandai family seems to support the activities of the scholars around the end of the Edo period. Therefore, it seems that there are records of Kogoro Katsura, Shinsaku Takasugi, Kaoru Inoue, Hirofumi Ito, etc. visited here.
Juhotei visited by the Meiji Restoration
Next to the south of Ryufukuji Temple, there was the Juhotei Ishinkan. There are several small buildings on the premises. Juhotei was built as a separation from the Bandai family, which is a family business of soy sauce 々. At the end of the Edo period, it became an accommodation for officials of the clan, and the head of the clan, Ribei Mandai, supported the activities of the priests, so it seems that the priests of the Meiji Restoration, such as Kogoro Katsura and Shinsaku Takasugi, visited here.
it seems to be one of the remains of the meiji era.
It was an old building that I didn't like. The exhibition facilities in the new building were charged (1 Person 200 yen for high school students and above). It seems that this is one of the remains of the Meiji Restoration and is also worthwhile as a private house building in the Edo period. Personally, I was born and lived in a huge country house of 180 years after construction, so I don't feel any charm for old and functionally inferior houses. This is a city-designated cultural property. It was built as a distance from the house where soy sauce was made.
A quick understanding of the history of Yamaguchi city during the Meiji Restoration
There is a charge for the exhibition facility that is a historical museum. However, it was meaningful to be able to understand the history of Yamaguchi Prefecture and Yamaguchi City during the Meiji Restoration with exhibit materials such as a diorama of 6 and a half minutes. There was also an exhibition about sightseeing points in Yamaguchi City, and when I was hitting my head, the staff gave me paper materials, which was helpful later. In addition to the museum, the distance where the old main house and the distinguished people of the Meiji Restoration stayed was preserved. I'm glad I went up freely. In addition, the parking point of the toilet and bicycle ...
Feel the Meiji Restoration more modern than Hagi
On a hot day in the latter half of August, I happened to find it while walking on the road in front of me. I'm not particularly interested in the end of the Edo period or the Meiji Restoration, but I naturally headed inside to get a little cooler. When you enter the gate, you will see a new exhibition hall on your left and an old Japanese-style house that seems to be a historic site on your right. The reception is in the new building and you will pay an admission fee of 200 yen. The person in the hall is low-key and polite, and he has a great liking. When asked when it was made, it was 2018. First, go to the left hand and enter the exhibition room. Not large, but ...