#auto-translate Kyotaro of Awase, the birthplace of Kyotaro Se, is a celebration of the village Ko (Gan) tailored in 1906 by Takemori Hiroshi Kiya and other young people from Awase. ) The...
#auto-translate It is said that migrants from Shuri and Naha settled in the uninhabited land of Awase, Kojima, and began to settle around 1768. At that time, Awase Island was a territoria...
#auto-translate Tokoro Maeno Utaki Awase was once called "Asejima" and "Kubanari", and was an uninhabited small island across the sea, but Sho Boku (1768) Around the y...
#auto-translate Hinukan (Uminchimun) Hinogami has been a god worshiped by the gods of the houses since ancient times, and was revered as a god to protect the houses in posterity, and late...
#auto-translate Izumi Izumi (Ubuga) Izumi Izumi was built using natural spring water as a well for drinking water in the early days of the formation of the Awase settlement (around 1768)....
#auto-translate Tokoro Tono Utaki Tono Mitake is a limestone stone shrine set up in the sand dunes where Adan grows in the eastern part of the village as the Yomochi god, and Nirai Kanai ...
#auto-translate Tokoro Arai Izumi (Meger) Arai Izumi is said to have been used for stray work and returning from fishing in the past, but its origin is unknown. Before 1945 (Showa 20), it...
#auto-translate Awase Land Land Readjustment Project Memorial Nakagami-gun As the only commercial and industrial area in the east of the area, Awase which had been prospering was destroye...
#auto-translate Origin of Awase Vijle Awase is a uninhabited small island that protruded from Kochi, Akabane Sea to the east from Takahara village, which is called "Aso Island" ...