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Excursions
Dazaifu
In the northern part of Kyushu Island in south-western Japan
lie the ruins of Dazaifu, a city that during the 1st century
was the seat of Government for the island and first line
of defence against threat from the East Asian countries.
The walled city once stood in open fields, but now the ruins
on the southern slopes of Mount Ono are surrounded by modern
Dazaifu, and the valued historic site has been turned into
a park. Apart from the interesting ruins, Dazaifu also boasts
one of Japan’s most important shrines. The Dazaifu-tenmangu
Shrine is dedicated to a great scholar named Sugawara Michizane,
who died in the year 903 and subsequently became revered
as a deity because of his wisdom. The shrine is now a place
of pilgrimage for students from all over the country, especially
when examination season comes around. The approach to the
shrine is lined with teahouses specialising in a local rice
cake delicacy, which is believed to keep illness at bay.
Transport:
Train from Fukuoka city
Mount Aso
The composite active volcano of Mt Aso lies almost in the
centre of Kyushu Island and boasts the world’s
largest caldera, stretching 11 miles (18km) from east
to west and 15 miles (24km)
from north to south. Inside the caldera are five volcanic
peaks, with one of them, Naka-dake, still being active
and regularly
emitting smoke and ash. The rest of the landscape inside
the caldera is green and grassy, grazed by cows and horses
and inhabited
by about 50,000 people in several towns and villages, seemingly
unphased by living inside a volcanic crater. In the town
of Aso there is a museum dedicated to the volcano. Visitors
can watch
large screen presentations about Aso and the associated geology,
in addition to viewing a live image from a camera positioned
at the active crater site.
Telephone: (096) 734 2111
Opening time: Aso Volcano Museum open
daily 9am to 5pm
Nagasaki
The beautifully situated port city of Nagasaki lies at the
southern end of Kyushu Island, 95 miles (152km) southwest
of Fukuoka.
Nagasaki was open to the world for centuries between
1639 and 1859 while the rest of Japan was secluded from
foreign
contact
by governmental decree. The exposure to foreign cultures
has left the city with a sophisticated and liberal air
that makes
it popular for tourists, enhanced by the many attractions
in the city itself and surrounding prefecture. Feudal
castles, samurai houses, smoking volcanoes, hot spring
baths, rugged
offshore
islands, beautiful beaches and friendly people are all
here to be enjoyed. The most important site in the city
is the
Peace
Park (Heiwa Koen), commemorating Nagasaki’s darkest
hour on August 9, 1945, when a nuclear bomb intended
to be dropped
on the Mitsubishi Shipyards exploded instead over the
Urakami district, killing 150,000 people. A black stone
column marks
the blast’s epicentre, alongside the Atomic Bomb
Museum.
E-mail: info@city.nagasaki.jp
Opening time: Atomic Bomb Museum:
daily 8.30am to 5.30pm
Admission: Atomic Bomb Museum: ¥200 (adults), ¥100 (children)
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