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1.Nara Prefecture
Nara Prefecture (奈良県, Nara-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu. As of 2020, Nara Prefecture has a population of 1,321,805 and has a geographic area of 3,691 square kilometres (1,425 sq mi). Nara Prefecture borders Kyoto Prefecture to the north, Osaka Prefecture to the northwest, Wakayama Prefecture to the southwest, and Mie Prefecture to the east. Nara is the capital and largest city of Nara Prefecture, with other major cities including Kashihara, Ikoma, and Yamatokōriyama. Nara Prefecture is located in the center of the Kii Peninsula on Japan's Pacific Ocean coast, and is one of only eight landlocked prefectures. Nara Prefecture has the distinction of having more UNESCO World Heritage listings than any other prefecture in Japan.
Population:1,303,658(2023-1-1)Area:3,690.94km2
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Nara Prefecture in Temple

1.Saigoku Kannon Pilgrimage  ・
The Saigoku Kannon Pilgrimage (西国三十三所, Saigoku Sanjūsan-sho) is a pilgrimage of thirty-three Buddhist temples throughout the Kansai region of Japan, similar to the Shikoku Pilgrimage. In addition to the official thirty-three temples, there are an additional three known as bangai (番外). The principal image in each temple is Kannon, known to Westerners as the Bodhisattva of Compassion (or sometimes mistranslated as 'Goddess of Mercy'); however, there is some variation among the images and the powers they possess.
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2.Nanto Shichi Daiji  ・
Nanto Shichi Daiji (南都七大寺), literally "the seven great temples of the southern capital (meaning the city of Nara)", is a historical common name generally referring to the powerful and influential seven Buddhist temples located in the Nara prefecture. There have been some changes as to which temples are included over the years, since there have been fluctuations in power. The following is a list as it stood at the early stage, all of which were originally built by imperial order:[1]
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3.Thirteen Buddhist Sites of Yamato  ・
The Thirteen Buddhist Sites of Yamato (大和十三仏霊場, Yamato jūsan butsu reijō) are a group of 13 Buddhist sacred sites in Nara Prefecture. Yamato was a former province of Japan corresponding to today's Nara Prefecture. The majority of the temples in this grouping are part of Japanese esoteric Shingon Buddhism.
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4.Asuka-dera  ・  ・Shingon-shu Buzan-ha
34°28′43″N 135°49′13″E / 34.478731°N 135.820214°E / 34.478731; 135.820214 Asuka-dera (飛鳥寺), also known as Hōkō-ji (法興寺), is a Buddhist temple in Asuka, Nara. Asuka-dera is regarded as one of the oldest temples in Japan.
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5.Abe Monju-in  ・  ・Buddhist
Abe Monju-in (安倍文殊院, あべもんじゅいん) is a Buddhist temple in the Abe area of Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Dating to the seventh century, it houses a sculptural group by Kaikei, and a kofun within its grounds has been designated a Special Historic Site.
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6.Enpuku-ji (Nara)  ・390 Arisato-chō, Ikoma, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Enpuku-ji (円福寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Shingon Risshu school, in Ikoma, Nara, Japan. The main object of worship (本尊) is Amida Nyorai.
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7.Ōno-ji  ・
Ōno-ji or Ōno-dera (大野寺) is a temple of the Shingon school of Buddhism, located in the city of Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. According to legend and myth, the temple was first opened by En no Gyōja in 681, rendered west entrance to Murō-ji by Kūkai in 824, then later became known with its current name.
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8.Ōminesan-ji  ・Ōmine-san, Tenkawa-mura Yoshino-gun, Nara Prefecture  ・Shugendō
Ōminesan-ji (大峯山寺, Ōminesan-ji) is an important temple of the Shugendō religion in Yoshino district, Nara prefecture, Japan. It is located at the peak of Mount Ōmine, or Sanjōgatake. According to tradition, it was founded by En no Ozunu, the founder of Shugendō, a form of mountain asceticism drawing from Buddhist and Shinto beliefs. Along with Kinpusen-ji Temple, it is considered the most important temple in Shugendō.[1]
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9.Oka-dera  ・
Oka-dera (岡寺) is a major Buddhist temple in the historic Asuka area of Nara Prefecture, Japan. Its formal name is Ryūgai-ji (龍蓋寺, "Dragon Lid Temple") and is associated with the Shingon-Buzan sect.[1] It was founded by Priest Gien (義淵) during the 7th century, and is the 7th temple on the Kansai Kannon Pilgrimage. The statue of Gien is one of the national treasures of Japan. At the heart of the temple is Japan's largest clay image, a Nyoirin Kannon from the 8th century.[2]
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10.Kakuan-ji  ・36 Nukatabeteramachi, Yamatokoriyama, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Kakuan-ji (額安寺) is a Buddhist temple in Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is affiliated with Shingon Risshu Buddhism, and was founded in 621.
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11.Kimpusen-ji  ・2498 Mount Yoshino, Yoshino, Yoshino district, Nara Prefecture  ・Kinpusen-Shugendō
Kinpusen-ji (金峯山寺, Kinpusen-ji) is the head temple of a branch of the Shugendō religion called Kinpusen-Shugendō in Yoshino district, Nara Prefecture, Japan. According to tradition, it was founded by En no Gyōja, who propagated a form of mountain asceticism drawing from Shinto and Buddhist beliefs. Along with Ōminesan-ji Temple, it is considered the most important temple in Shugendō.[1]
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12.Kōgen-ji  ・630 Toyoura, Asuka-mura, Takaichi-gun, Nara Prefecture  ・Jōdo Shinshū Honganji-ha
Kōgen-ji (向原寺, also written 広厳寺) is a Buddhist temple in Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is affiliated with Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism. It is one of the Twenty-five Kansai flower temples.
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13.Shigisan Gyokuzōin  ・
Shigisan Gyokuzōin (信貴山玉蔵院) is a Buddhist temple in Heguri, Nara Prefecture, Japan at Mount Shigi.
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14.Jinraku-ji  ・267 Hatanoshō, Tawaramoto-chō, Shiki District, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Jinraku-ji (秦楽寺) is a Buddhist temple in the town of Tawaramoto, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is located in Tawaramoto near Kasanui Station. It was commissioned by Prince Shotoku in the 5th century and built by Hata no Kawakatsu. The Great Hall contains a Bodhisattva while outside there is also a Shinto shrine with a torii and a pond in the shape of a Chinese character.[1]
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15.Seson-ji  ・
Seson-ji (世尊寺) is a Buddhist temple in Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is affiliated with Sōtō Buddhism. 34°24′17″N 135°49′52″E / 34.4048°N 135.8311°E / 34.4048; 135.8311
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16.Taima-dera  ・
Taima-dera (當麻寺) is a Buddhist temple in Katsuragi, Nara, Japan. The temple legend says it was built originally in 612 by the Imperial Prince Maroko, the brother of Prince Shotoku. The temple was moved to its present location in 681 by the grandson of Prince Maroko, and served as the head temple, or honzan (本山) of the Hosso sect although currently the temple is jointly administrated by Shingon and Jodo schools.
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17.Tachibana-dera  ・
Tachibana-dera (橘寺) is a Buddhist temple in Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is affiliated with Tendai Buddhism. According to legend, it was founded by Prince Shōtoku. 34°28′12″N 135°49′05″E / 34.4700°N 135.8181°E / 34.4700; 135.8181
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18.Daruma-ji  ・  ・Buddhist
Daruma-ji (Japanese: 達磨寺, lit. 'Daruma Temple', also called Daruma-dera) is a Zen Buddhist temple in the city of Ōji in the Kitakatsuragi District, Nara Prefecture, Japan and is one of the 28 historical Sites of Prince Shōtoku.
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19.Chikurin-ji  ・
Chikurin-ji (竹林寺) is a Buddhist temple in Ikoma, Nara, Japan. The main object of worship (本尊) is Monju Bosatsu (Manjushri).
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20.Chūgū-ji  ・
Chūgū-ji (中宮寺) is a temple in Nara Prefecture, Japan, that was founded as a nunnery in the seventh century by Shōtoku Taishi. Located immediately to the northeast of Hōryū-ji, its statue of Miroku and Tenjukoku mandala are National Treasures.
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21.Chōgaku-ji  ・  ・Buddhist
Chōgaku-ji (Japanese: 長岳寺) is a Japanese Buddhist temple of the Kōyasan Shingon-shū sect in the city of Tenri in Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1] It is located within Yamato-Aogaki Quasi-National Park[2] along the Yamanobe no michi (Japanese: 山辺の道), the oldest road in Japan,[3] at the foot of Mt. Ryūō in the Sanuki Mountains.[4] The temple is the fourth of the thirteen Buddhist sites of Yamato,[5] and the nineteenth of the twenty-five Kansai flower temples.[1]
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22.Chōgosonshi-ji  ・2280-1, Oaza ShigisanHeguri, Ikoma-gun Nara Prefecture 636-0923  ・Shigi-san Shingon Buddhism
Chōgosonshi-ji (朝護孫子寺, popularly called Shigisan (信貴山) is a Buddhist temple in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It was established in 587.
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23.Hase-dera  ・731-1 Hatsuse, Sakurai, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon-shu Buzan-ha
Hase-dera (長谷寺) is the main temple of the Buzan sect of Shingon Buddhism. The temple is located in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The Main Hall is a National Treasure of Japan.
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24.Butsuryū-ji  ・1684 Haibara Akabane, Uda, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon (Murō-ji branch)
Butsuryū-ji (仏隆寺 or 佛隆寺) is a ninth-century Shingon temple in Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is located approximately four kilometres southwest of Murō-ji across Mount Murō.[1]
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25.Hokki-ji  ・1873 Okamoto, Ikaruga-chō, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture  ・Shōtoku-shū
Hokki-ji or Hōki-ji (法起寺, the ‘temple of the Arising Dharma’)[1] – formerly known as Okamoto-dera (岡本寺) and Ikejiri-dera (池後寺) – is a Buddhist temple in Okamoto, Ikaruga, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The temple's honorary sangō prefix is "Kōhonzan" (岡本山), although it is rarely used. The temple was constructed to honor Avalokitesvara, and an 11-faced statue of the goddess is the primary object of worship in the temple. Hokki-ji is often considered to be one of the seven great temples founded by Prince Shōtoku, but in fact the temple was not completed until some decades after his death. In 1993, it was registered together with Hōryū-ji as an UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Buddhist Monuments in the Hōryū-ji Area.
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26.Hōzan-ji  ・1-1 Monzen-chō, Ikoma, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Hōzan-ji (宝山寺 Hōzan-ji) is a Buddhist temple in Monzen-machi, Ikoma, Nara, Japan. Though officially dedicated to the deity Acala (Fudō Myōō), the temple serves as a cult-center of the deity Kangiten (Shoten) and is also called 'Ikoma-Shōten' (生駒聖天).
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27.Hōryū-ji  ・1-1 Hōryū-ji Sannai, Ikaruga-chō, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture  ・Shōtoku
Hōryū-ji (Japanese: 法隆寺, Hepburn: Temple of the Flourishing Dharma) is a Buddhist temple that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples, in Ikaruga, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Its full name is Hōryū Gakumonji (法隆学問寺), or Learning Temple of the Flourishing Law, the complex serving as both a seminary and monastery.
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28.Hōrin-ji (Nara)  ・1570 Mii, Ikaruga-chō, Ikoma-gun, Nara-ken  ・Shōtoku-shū
Hōrin-ji (法輪寺, 法琳寺, 法林寺), or Mii-dera (三井寺, 御井寺) is a Buddhist temple in Mii, Ikaruga, Nara, Japan. The temple is located about a kilometer north of Hōryū-ji's Tō-in. The temple's sangō prefix is Myōken-san (妙見山).
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29.Murō-ji  ・Uda, Nara Prefecture  ・Buddhism
Murō-ji (Japanese: 室生寺) is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Shingon school, located in the city of Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The temple shows typical aspects of Shingon Buddhism, with its buildings laid on the mountainside of Mount Murō (室生山, Murō-san), and historically served as a place of worship for the Japanese dragon Zennyo Ryūō (善如龍王), associated with rain prayers.
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30.Kawara-dera  ・
Kawara-dera (川原寺) was a Buddhist temple established during the Asuka period in Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Excavations have revealed a large-scale complex which included two kondō, a pagoda, extensive priests' quarters, and roof tiles that are "among the most beautiful ever made in Japan".[1] The area has been designated a Historic Site and forms part of a grouping of sites submitted in 2007 for future inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List: Asuka-Fujiwara: Archaeological sites of Japan’s Ancient Capitals and Related Properties.[2][3][4] Related artefacts are displayed at the Asuka Historical Museum.[5]
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31.Yamada-dera  ・
Yamada-dera (山田寺) was a Buddhist temple established in the Asuka period in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The area has been designated a Special Historic Site and forms part of a grouping of sites submitted in 2007 for future inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List: Asuka-Fujiwara: Archaeological sites of Japan’s Ancient Capitals and Related Properties.[1][2][3] Excavations in the 1980s uncovered a well-preserved section of the temple's covered corridors that predate the surviving buildings of Hōryū-ji: "for the history of Japanese architecture, this discovery is of as great moment as the finding of the seventh-century Takamatsuzuka tomb paintings in March 1972 was for the history of Japanese art."[4]
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32.Enshō-ji (Nara)  ・
Enshō-ji (圓照寺 or 円照寺) is a Buddhist temple complex in Nara founded by Queen Bunchi, daughter of Emperor Go-Mizunoo, in 1656. Together with Chūgū-ji and Hokke-ji, it is considered one of the Three Yamato Monzeki (大和三門跡), or imperial temples, belonging to the Myōshin-ji school of Rinzai Zen.[1] The temple served as model for Gesshū-ji (月修寺) in Yukio Mishima's Spring Snow and was used as one of the locations for the filming of its 2005 dramatization.
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33.Gangō-ji  ・11 Chūin-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Gangō-ji (元興寺) is an ancient Buddhist temple, that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples, in Nara, Japan.
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34.Kikō-ji  ・508 Sugawara-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Hossō
Kikō-ji (喜光寺) is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. Founded in the eighth century, its Muromachi-period Hondō and the Heian-period statue of Amida Nyorai enshrined within are Important Cultural Properties.
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35.Saidai-ji  ・1-1-5 Saidaiji Shibachō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Saidai-ji (西大寺) or the "Great Western Temple" is a Buddhist temple that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples in the city of Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The temple was first established in AD 765 as a counterpart to Tōdai-ji and it is the main temple of the Shingon Risshu (真言律宗) sect of Buddhism after the sect's founder, Eison (叡尊), took over administration in 1238.[1] It has undergone several reconstruction efforts since then during the succeeding centuries.
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36.Shōryaku-ji  ・157 Bodaisen-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Bodaisen Shingon
Shōryaku-ji (正暦寺) is a Shingon temple in the southeast of Nara, Japan. Founded in 992, it is the head temple of the Bodaisen Shingon sect.[1]
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37.Shin-Yakushi-ji  ・1352 Takabatake-chō, Nara-shi, Nara-ken630-8301  ・Kegon sect
Shin-Yakushi-ji (新薬師寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Kegon sect in Nara, Japan. It was founded in 747 by Empress Kōmyō. Initially a large complete Shichidō garan temple, it suffered from fire damage and deteriorated during the Heian period. The temple was revived during the Kamakura period. Only one building, the present main hall or Hon-dō (本堂), has survived from the 8th century. All other structures date to the Kamakura period.
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38.Daian-ji  ・
34°40′05″N 135°48′46″E / 34.668°N 135.812722°E / 34.668; 135.812722 Daian-ji (大安寺) was founded during the Asuka period and is one of the Seven Great Temples of Nara, Japan.
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39.Tōshōdai-ji  ・13–46 Gojō-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Risshū
Tōshōdai-ji (唐招提寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Risshū sect in the city of Nara, in Nara Prefecture, Japan. The Classic Golden Hall, also known as the kondō, has a single story, hipped tiled roof with a seven bay wide facade. It is considered the archetype of "classical style". It was founded in 759 by the Tang dynasty Chinese monk Jianzhen during the Nara period. Jianzhen was hired by the newly empowered clans to travel in search of funding from private aristocrats as well.
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40.Tōdai-ji  ・ Japan 1 Zōshi-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Kegon
Tōdai-ji (東大寺, Todaiji temple, "Eastern Great Temple") is a Buddhist temple complex that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples, located in the city of Nara, Japan. Though it was originally founded in the year 738 CE, Tōdai-ji was not opened until the year 752 CE. The construcion of the temple was an attempt to imitate Chinese temples from the much-admired Tang dynasty. The temple has undergone several reconstructions since then, with the most significant reconstruction (that of the Great Buddha Hall) taking place in 1709.[1] Its Great Buddha Hall (大仏殿 Daibutsuden) houses the world's largest bronze statue of the Buddha Vairocana, known in Japanese as Daibutsu (大仏). The temple also serves as the Japanese headquarters of the Kegon school of Buddhism. The temple is a listed UNESCO World Heritage Site as one of the "Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara", together with seven other sites including temples, shrines and places in the city of Nara.
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41.Hannya-ji  ・221 Hannyaji-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Ritsu
Hannya-ji (般若寺) is a Buddhist temple of the Shingon Ritsu sect in Nara, Japan. Its foundation is variously dated, but mention in a document in the Shōsōin provides a terminus ante quem of the mid-eighth century.
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42.Byakugō-ji  ・392 Byakugōji-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Shingon Risshū
Byakugō-ji (白毫寺) is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. A number of wooden statues of the Heian and Kamakura periods have been designated Important Cultural Properties and the temple's five-coloured camellias are a Prefectural Natural Monument.[1][2]
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43.Futai-ji  ・  ・Buddhist
Futai-ji (不退寺), also known as Narihira-dera (業平寺), is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. The temple was opened by Ariwara no Narihira in 847, known as the author of the Tales of Ise. The temple was built over a place where it was formerly a mansion of Narihira's grandfather, former Emperor Heizei. The main hall houses a Shō-kannon (聖観音) (a form of Avalokiteśvara or Guan Yin) buddha image as its primary worship object, surrounded by five Myo-O, as well as a small Shinto shrine also inside the same building.
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44.Hokke-ji  ・882 Hokkeji-chō, Nara-shi, Nara-ken  ・Kōmyō
Hokke-ji (法華寺, Hokke-ji), is a Buddhist temple in the city of Nara, Japan. Hokke-ji was built by Empress Kōmyō in 745, originally as a nunnery temple on the grounds where her father Fujiwara no Fuhito's mansion stood. According to records kept by the temple, the initial construction went on until around 782. It once had a large complex with several halls, gates, and two pagodas.
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45.Yakushi-ji  ・457 Nishinokyō-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Hossō
Yakushi-ji (薬師寺) is one of the most famous imperial and ancient Buddhist temples in Japan, and was once one of the Seven Great Temples of Nanto, located in Nara. The temple is the headquarters of the Hossō school of Japanese Buddhism. Yakushi-ji is one of the sites that are collectively inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name of "Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara."[1]
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46.Ryōsen-ji (Nara)  ・3879 Nakamachi, Nara631-0052  ・Ryōsen-ji Shingon Buddhism
Ryōsen-ji (霊山寺) is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. Founded in the eighth century, the Hondō is a National Treasure and a number of other buildings and temple treasures have been designated Important Cultural Properties.
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47.Akishino-dera  ・757 Akishino-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Buddhism
Akishino-dera (秋篠寺) is a Buddhist temple in Nara, Japan. Founded in the eighth century, its Kamakura-period Hondō is a National Treasure.
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48.Enjō-ji  ・1273 Ninnikusen-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Omuro Shingon
Enjō-ji (円成寺) is a Shingon temple in the northeast of Nara, Japan. A number of its buildings and images have been designated National Treasures and Important Cultural Properties, and its late-Heian period gardens are a Place of Scenic Beauty.
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49.Kōfuku-ji  ・48 Noboriōji-chō, Nara, Nara Prefecture  ・Hossō
Kōfuku-ji (興福寺, Kōfuku-ji) is a Buddhist temple that was once one of the powerful Seven Great Temples in the city of Nara, Japan. The temple is the national headquarters of the Hossō school.
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50.Tamukeyama Hachimangū  ・  ・Shinto
Tamukeyama Hachiman Shrine (手向山八幡宮, Tamukeyama Hachimangū) is a Shinto shrine near Tōdai-ji, Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is a Hachiman shrine, dedicated to the kami Hachiman. It was established in 749. Kami enshrined here include Emperor Ojin, Emperor Nintoku, Empress Jingū and Emperor Chūai in addition to Hachiman.
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51.Shōsōin  ・
The Shōsō-in (正倉院) is the treasure house of Tōdai-ji Temple in Nara, Japan.[1][2] The building is in the azekura (log-cabin) style with a raised floor. It lies to the northwest of the Great Buddha Hall. The Shōsō-in houses artifacts connected to Emperor Shōmu (聖武天皇)(701–756) and Empress Kōmyō (光明皇后)(701–760), as well as arts and crafts of the Tempyō (天平) era of Japanese history.
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52.Gagoze  ・
Gagoze (元興寺), also gagoji, guwagoze, gangō, and gangōji no oni (元興寺の鬼, the oni of gangōji) is a yōkai said to have appeared at Gangō-ji in the Nara Prefecture around the Asuka period. It can also be found in the text of the Heian period Nihon Ryōiki (in the story, 雷の憙を得て生ま令めし子の強き力在る縁," On a Boy of Great Strength Who Was Born of the Thunder’s Rejoicing"), the Honchō Monzui, among others.[1] In classical yōkai drawings such as the Gazu Hyakki Yagyō by Toriyama Sekien, it is depicted as an oni with the appearance of a monk.
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Nara Prefecture in Shrine

53.Ikoma Shrine  ・Shinto
Ikoma Jinja (生駒神社) is a Shinto shrine in Ikoma, Nara, Japan. Generally called Ikoma Taisha (往馬大社). The formal name of the shrine is "Ikomaniimasu-Ikomatsuhiko Jinja (往馬坐伊古麻都比古神社)". This shrine is also known as "Ikoma-Taisha", which means "great shrine of Ikoma".
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54.Isonokami Shrine  ・Shinto
Isonokami Shrine (石上神宮, Isonokami-jingū, also Isonokami-futsu-no-mitama-jinja (石上布都御魂神社), Furu-ōmyojin (布留大明神) etc.) is a Shinto shrine located in the hills of Furu in Tenri, Nara prefecture, Japan.[1] It is one of the oldest extant Shinto shrines in Japan and has housed several significant artifacts.
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55.Uda Mikumari Shrine  ・Shinto
Uda Mikumari Shrine (宇太水分神社, Uda Mikumari-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located in Uda, Nara, Japan. It is dedicated to mikumari [Wikidata], a female Shinto kami associated with water. The honden was built near the end of the Kamakura period, and is listed as a National Treasure of Japan.
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56.Ōmiwa Shrine  ・Shinto
Ōmiwa Shrine (大神神社, Ōmiwa-jinja), also known as Miwa Shrine (三輪神社, Miwa-jinja, alternately written as Miwa-myōjin (三輪明神)), is a Shinto shrine located in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1] The shrine is noted because it contains no sacred images or objects because it is believed to serve Mount Miwa, the mountain on which it stands.[2] For the same reason, it has a worship hall (拝殿, haiden), but no place for the deity to be housed (神殿, shinden). In this sense, it is a model of what the first Shinto shrines were like.[3] Ōmiwa Shrine is one of the oldest extant Shinto shrines in Japan and the site has been sacred ground for some of the earliest religious practices in Japan. Because of this, it has sometimes been named as Japan's first shrine. Ōmiwa Shrine is a tutelary shrine of the Japanese sake brewers.[4]
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57.Ōyamato Shrine  ・Shinto
Ōyamato Shrine (大和神社, Ōyamato Jinja) is a Shinto shrine located in Tenri, Nara in Japan. In the time of Emperor Sujin there was a crisis. Amaterasu (via the Yata-no-Kagami and the Kusanagi sword) and Yamato Okunitama, the tutelary deity of Yamato, were originally worshipped in the great hall of the imperial palace. When a series of plagues broke out during Emperor Sujin's reign, he "dreaded [...] the power of these Gods, and did not feel secure in their dwelling together." He thus entrusted the mirror and the sword to his daughter Toyosukiirihime, who brought them to the village of Kasanuhi, and delegated the worship of Yamato Okunitama to another daughter, Nunaki-iri-hime [ja],[1][2]but her health began to fail shortly afterward. It is recorded that Nunakiiri-hime became emaciated after losing all of her hair, which rendered her unable to perform her duties.[3] Ichishi no Nagaochi [ja] would conduct the Okunitama rites replacing the emaciated Nunaki-iri-hime [ja].[4] Ichishi no Nagaochi [ja] would be the ancestor of the Yamato clan.[5] This replacement is taken as a shift towards more patriarchai religion.[4] When the pestilence showed no sign of abating, he then performed divination, which revealed the plague to have been caused by Ōmononushi, the god of Mount Miwa. When the god was offered proper worship as per his demands, the epidemic ceased.[1][2]
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58.Kashihara Shrine  ・Shinto
The Kashihara Shrine (橿原神宮, Kashihara Jingū) is a Shinto shrine located in the city of Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The shrine was built in 2 April 1890 at the site of the Kashihara-gū, which is situated on the southeastern side of Mount Unebi of Yamato Sanzan. Japan's first Emperor, Emperor Jimmu, is said to have acceded to the throne on 11 February 660 BC at the Kashihara-gū.
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59.Kinpu Shrine (Yoshino)  ・Shinto
Kinpu Shrine (金峯神社, Kinpu-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located in Yoshino district, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The honden, or main hall, is constructed in the nagare-zukuri style. In 2004, it was designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range.
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60.Tatsuta Taisha  ・Shinto
Tatsuta Shrine (龍田大社, Tatsuta-taisha) is a Shinto shrine located in Sangō, Nara in Japan. The shrine is also known in Japanese (esp. formerly) as Tatsuta-jinja (龍田神社). The Shrine became the object of Imperial patronage during the early Heian period.[1] In 965, Emperor Murakami ordered that Imperial messengers were sent to report important events to the guardian kami of Japan. These heihaku were initially presented to 16 shrines including the Tatsuta Shrine.[2]
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61.Tanzan Shrine  ・Shinto
Tanzan Shrine (談山神社, Tanzan-jinja), also known as the Danzan Shrine, the Tōnomine Shrine (多武峯社, Tōnomine-sha) and the Tōnomine Temple (多武峯寺, Tōnomine-ji), is a Shinto shrine in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1][2][3][4] It is located 5km from Ishibutai Kofun.[5]
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62.Nagao Shrine  ・Shinto
Nagao Shrine (長尾神社, Nagao-jinja) is a Shinto shrine dedicated to the goddesses Amaterasu-ōmikami, Toyouke-ōmikami, Mihikahime-mikoto and Shirakumowake-mikoto. It is located in the city of Katsuragi in Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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63.Niukawakami Shrine  ・Shinto
Niukawakami Shrine (丹生川上神社, Niukawakami Jinja), also known as Nibukawakami Jinja, is a Shinto shrine located at Higashiyoshino in Nara, Japan.
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64.Hirose Taisha  ・Shinto
Hirose Shrine (廣瀬大社, Hirose-taisha), also referred to as Hirose-jinja, is a Shinto shrine located in Kawai, Nara prefecture, Japan. The shrine became the object of Imperial patronage during the early Heian period.[1] In 965, Emperor Murakami ordered that Imperial messengers were sent to report important events to the guardian kami of Japan. These heihaku were initially presented to 16 shrines including the Hirose Shrine.[2]
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65.Meta Shrine  ・Shinto
Meta Shrine (賣太神社, Meta Jinja) is a Shinto shrine in Hieda, a moated village located in Yamatokōriyama in Nara, Nara, Japan.
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66.Yoshino Shrine  ・Shinto
Yoshino Shrine (吉野神宮, Yoshino jingū) is a Shinto shrine located in Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Prefecture, Japan. It was founded in 1892. The main kami enshrined here is Emperor Go-Daigo. The shrine's main festival is held annually on September 27. It was formerly an imperial shrine of the first rank (官幣大社, kanpei taisha) in the Modern system of ranked Shinto Shrines.
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67.Yoshino Mikumari Shrine  ・Shinto
Yoshino Mikumari Shrine (吉野水分神社, Yoshino Mikumari-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located on Mount Yoshino in Yoshino district, Nara, Japan.[1] It is closely associated with Emperor Go-Daigo. The Shrine is dedicated to mikumari [Wikidata], a female Shinto kami associated with water, fertility and safe birth. Yoshino Mikumari Shrine is one of four important mikumari shrines in the former province Yamato. The shrine also houses six kami that are more or less related to mikumari (Takami-musubi-no-kami, Sukuna-hiko-no-kami, Mikogami, Ama-tsu-hiko-hi-no-ninigi-no-mikoto, Tamayori-hime-no-mikoto, and Yorozu-hata-toyo-akitsushi-hime-no-mikoto). A wooden statue of the deity Tamayori hime is registered as a National Treasure of Japan.
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68.Yoshimizu Shrine  ・Shinto
Yoshimizu Shrine (吉水神社, Yoshimizu-jinja) is a Shinto shrine located on Mount Yoshino in Yoshino district, Nara, Japan. It is dedicated to Emperor Go-Daigo, and the samurai Kusunoki Masashige. In 2004, it was designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range. In 2014 the temple was embroiled in a scandal when it was discovered that head priest Satō Kazuhiko's private blog contained extreme hate speech towards Chinese and Koreans, in addition to him being the head of a local right-wing extremist group.[1]
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69.Kasuga-taisha  ・Shinto
Kasuga-taisha (春日大社) is a Shinto shrine in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1] It is the shrine of the Fujiwara family, established in 768 CE and rebuilt several times over the centuries. The interior is famous for its many bronze lanterns, as well as the many stone lanterns that lead up the shrine. The architectural style Kasuga-zukuri takes its name from Kasuga Shrine's honden (sanctuary). The Torii at Kasuga-taisha is one of the oldest in Shinto and helped influence the style of Torii seen across much of Japan. Kasuga Shrine, and the Kasugayama Primeval Forest near it, are registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the "Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara".
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70.Himuro Shrine  ・Shinto
Himuro Shrine (氷室神社, Himuro Jinja) is a Shinto shrine in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It was established in 710. Kami enshrined here include Emperor Nintoku and Nukata no Onakatsuhiko no Mikoto (額田大仲彦命). The shrine's main festival is held annually on October 1.
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71.Himegamisha Shrine, Nara  ・Shinto
The Himegamisha Shrine (Japanese: 比売神社, Himegamisha) is a Shinto shrine in the city of Nara, in Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is built in 1981 by the people of this neighborhood on the tomb called Hime-zuka (princess' tomb) that is estimated to be a burial place of Princess Tōchi, an Empress-consort of Emperor Kōbun. It is a sessha (subsidiary shrine) of the Kagami Shrine [ja].
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Nara Prefecture in Castle

72.Uda Matsuyama Castle
Uda Matsuyama Castle (宇陀松山城, Uda Matsuyama-jō) is a castle structure in Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The site was designated a National Historic Site.[1] In 1600, Fukushima Masanori's younger brother Fukushima Takaharu became the lord of the castle.[1][2] The castle was demolished by Tokugawa shogunate`s one country one castle rule in 1615.[3]
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73.Kōriyama Castle
34°39′6.9″N 135°46′44.18″E / 34.651917°N 135.7789389°E / 34.651917; 135.7789389 Kōriyama Castle (郡山城, Kōriyama-jō) is a Japanese castle in what is now the city of Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The Sengoku daimyō Tsutsui Junkei started construction of the castle, and Toyotomi Hidenaga made it his residence.[1] In the Edo period, it became the headquarters of the Kōriyama Domain. During this time it was held by members of the Mizuno, Okudaira Matsudaira, Honda, Fujii Matsudaira, and Yanagisawa clans.
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74.Shigisan Castle
Shigisan castle (信貴山城, Shigisanjō) was a Japanese castle of the Sengoku period, controlled by the Kizawa and Matsunaga clans. There are little remains of the castle on the present day site, just some moats and earthworks.[1]
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75.Takatori Castle
Takatori Castle was a 14th-century Japanese castle, now in ruins, in Takatori, Nara Prefecture.[1][2]
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76.Yagyū Castle
Yagyū Castle (柳生城, Yagyū-jō) is the remains of a castle structure in Nara, Nara Prefecture. Yagyū castle was constructed by the Yagyū clan in the Nanboku-chō period and became a home castle of the Yagyū clan.[1] In 1544, the castle was attacked by Tsutsui Junkei's force and defeated.[1] Later, Yagyū clan was approved as the main domain of Yagyū in Yamato by Oda Nobunaga.[1] In 1590, Toyotomi Hideyoshi seized the territories of the Yagyū clan.[1]
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Nara Prefecture in Museum

77.Asuka Historical Museum  ・Okuyama, Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan
The Asuka Historical Museum (飛鳥資料館, Asuka Shiryōkan) is a historical museum in Okuyama, Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The museum was founded in 1975 and is a unit of the Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties.[1]
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78.Tenri University Sankōkan Museum  ・Tenri, Nara Prefecture
Tenri University Sankōkan Museum (天理大学附属天理参考館, Tenri Daigaku Fuzoku Tenri Sankōkan) first opened in Tenri, Nara Prefecture, Japan, in 1930. Initially the Overseas Reference Materials Room (海外事情参考品室), it was renamed the Overseas Reference Materials Hall (海外事情参考品館) in 1938, taking its present name in 1950 when it came to be affiliated with Tenri University. The Museum reopened in a new building in 2001. The collection of over 280,000 objects includes ethnographic and archaeological material from Japan and the rest of the world, as well as transport-related artefacts. An offshoot, the Tenri Gallery (天理ギャラリー), opened in the Tokyo Tenri Building (東京天理教館) in Chiyoda, Tokyo in 1962.[1][2][3]
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Nara Prefecture in art museum

79.Tomimoto Kenkichi Memorial Museum
The Tomimoto Kenkichi Memorial Museum (富本憲吉記念館, Tomimoto Kenkichi Kinenkan) opened in Ando, Nara Prefecture, Japan in 1974. It is dedicated to the life and works of Tomimoto Kenkichi, who was born in the vicinity.[1][2] Media related to Kenkichi Tomimoto Memorial Hall at Wikimedia Commons 34°36′14.6″N 135°45′26.7″E / 34.604056°N 135.757417°E / 34.604056; 135.757417
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80.Nara Prefecture Complex of Man'yo Culture
The Nara Prefecture Complex of Man'yo Culture (奈良県立万葉文化館, Nara-kenritsu Man'yō Bunkakan) is a museum located in Asuka Village, Nara Prefecture in Japan. It is dedicated to the Man'yōshū, an 8th-century anthology of waka poetry. Its honorary director is Susumu Nakanishi.
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81.Irie Taikichi Memorial Museum of Photography Nara City
Irie Taikichi Memorial Museum of Photography Nara City (入江泰吉記念奈良市写真美術館, Irie Taikichi Kinen Nara-shi Shashin Bijutsukan) opened in Nara, Japan, in 1992. Located near Shin-Yakushi-ji and designed by Kishō Kurokawa, the Museum was formerly known as the Nara City Museum of Photography (奈良市写真美術館). The collection includes the complete oeuvre of Irie Taikichi (1905 – 1992), some 80,000 works; a set of 1,025 Meiji and Taishō glass plates by Kudō Risaburō (工藤利三郎) (1848 – 1929) that are a Registered Tangible Cultural Property; and photographs by Tsuda Yoho (津田洋甫) (1923 – 2014).[1][2][3][4]
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82.Shōhaku Art Museum
Shōhaku Art Museum (松伯美術館, Shōhaku Bijutsukan) opened in Nara, Japan, in 1994. It was established thanks to donations of artworks and the support of Kintetsu. The collection comprises paintings and sketches by Uemura Shōen, Uemura Shōkō (上村松篁), and Uemura Atsushi (上村淳之), and special exhibitions are staged to help promote the appreciation of Nihonga. The shō (松) element of the museum's name is derived from the first character of the first two of these artists' given names, as well as from the pines in the garden of the former honorary chairman of Kintetsu, where the museum now stands, while the haku (伯) element comes from its tea house, known as Hakusentei (伯泉亭).[1][2]
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83.Nakano Museum of Art
Nakano Museum of Art (中野美術館, Nakano Bijutsukan) opened in Nara, Japan, in 1984. Located across Kaerumata Pond (蛙股池) from the Yamato Bunkakan, the museum's collection of Meiji, Taishō, and Shōwa yōga, nihonga, sculptures, and copper-plate engravings, built up by Nakano Kanji (中野皖司), includes works by Asai Chū, Nakamura Tsune, Kishida Ryūsei, Suda Kunitarō (須田国太郎), and Yokoyama Taikan.[1][2]
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84.Nara Prefectural Museum of Art
Nara Prefectural Museum of Art (奈良県立美術館, Nara kenritsu bijutsukan) opened in Nara, Japan in 1973. The collection numbers some 4,100 items and special exhibitions are also held.[1][2]
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85.Nara National Museum
The Nara National Museum (奈良国立博物館, Nara Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan) is one of the pre-eminent national art museums in Japan.[1]
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86.Neiraku Museum
Neiraku Museum (寧楽美術館, Neiraku Bijitsukan) is an art museum in the city of Nara, central Japan.[1] The museum opened in April 1969. It contains the works collected by Nakamura Junsaku (1875–1953), who was the founder of the Isuien Garden. The collection totals over 2000 items, which includes bronze wares, seals and mirrors of ancient China as well as pottery of ancient Korea. The museum building was built in a traditional style and features rotating exhibitions.
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87.Museum Yamato Bunkakan
The Museum of Japanese Art Yamato Bunkakan (大和文華館, Yamato bunkakan) is a museum of Asian art in Nara, Nara.[1] The museum was established in 1960[2] to preserve and display the private collection of Kintetsu Corporation (named Kinki Nippon Railway Co., Ltd. till June 27, 2003).[3]
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Nara Prefecture in station

88.Asuka Station  ・560, Koshi, AsukaNara Japan (奈良県高市郡明日香村越560)
Asuka Station (飛鳥駅, Asuka-eki) is a railway station located in Asuka, Takaichi, Nara, Japan, on the Kintetsu Railway Yoshino Line.
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89.Ikebe Station  ・1-3, Ikebe 1-chōme, Kawai, Kitakatsuragi,Nara Japan (奈良県北葛城郡河合町池部1丁目1-3)
Ikebe Station (池部駅, Ikebe-eki) is a railway station in Kawai, Kitakatsuragi, Nara, Japan.
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90.Ichio Station  ・784, Ichio, TakatoriNara(奈良県高市郡高取町市尾784)Japan
Ichio Station (市尾駅, Ichio-eki) is a train station located in Takatori, Takaichi District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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91.Ichinomoto Station  ・1418, Kawaragama, Ichinomotochō, TenriNaraJapan(奈良県天理市櫟本町瓦釜1418番地)
Ichinomoto Station (櫟本駅, Ichinomoto-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Tenri, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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92.Iwaki Station (Nara)  ・220-2, Nagao, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市長尾220-2)Japan
Iwaki Station (磐城駅, Iwaki-eki) is a railway station in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1]
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93.Iwami Station (Nara)  ・485, Iwami, MiyakeNara Japan (奈良県磯城郡三宅町石見485)
Iwami Station (石見駅) is a train station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Miyake, Nara, Japan.
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94.Ukiana Station  ・376-2, Ōaza Tai, Yamatotakada, Nara(奈良県大和高田市田井11)Japan
Ukiana Station (浮孔駅, Ukiana-eki) is a railway station in Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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95.Ōji Station (Nara)  ・1-1 Kudo 2-chome, Ōji Town, Kitakatsuragi District,Nara Prefecture,Japan
Ōji Station (王寺駅, Ōji-eki) is a railway station in Ōji, Nara, Japan. Operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) and Kintetsu Railway, it is one of the four oldest railway stations in Nara Prefecture, and forms a major junction in the region. The station serves the Yamatoji Line (Kansai Main Line), and is the terminus for the Wakayama Line and Kintetsu Ikoma Line.
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96.Ōada Station  ・1066, Sanate, ŌyodoNara(奈良県吉野郡大淀町佐名伝1066)Japan
Ōada Station (大阿太駅, Ōada-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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97.Ōwada Station (Nara)  ・1809-2, Ōaza Ōwada, Kawai,Nara, Japan (奈良県北葛城郡河合町大字大輪田1809-2)
Ōwada Station (大輪田駅, Ōwada-eki) is an unstaffed railway station in the town of Kawai, Nara, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu Railway's Tawaramoto Line. It is 8.2 km (5.1 miles) from Nishi-Tawaramoto, while 1.9 km (1.2 miles) from Shin-Ōji.
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98.Oshimi Station  ・342-2, Oshimi, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市忍海342-2)Japan
Oshimi Station (忍海駅, Oshimi-eki) is a train station in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The station has one platforms and one track.
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99.Kasanui Station  ・330, Hatanoshō, TawaramotoNara Japan (奈良県磯城郡田原本町秦ノ庄330)
Kasanui Station (笠縫駅, Kasanui-eki) is a local railway station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line. It is located in Tawaramoto, Nara, Japan, between Tawaramoto Station and Yamato-Yagi Station. It is near the Buddhist temple Jinraku-ji.
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100.Kashiba Station  ・1, Shimodanishi 1-chōme, KashibaNara Japan (奈良県香芝市下田西1丁目1番)
Kashiba Station (香芝駅, Kashiba-eki) is a train station in Kashiba, Nara, Japan. This station has a transfer to Kintetsu Shimoda Station on Kintetsu Osaka Line.
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101.Kitauchi Station  ・589-4, Sugawa-chō, GojōNara Japan (奈良県五條市住川町589-4)
Kitauchi Station (北宇智駅, Kitauchi-eki) is a train station in Gojō, Nara, Japan.
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102.Kintetsu-Kōriyama Station  ・232, Minamikōriyamachō, Yamato-KoriyamaNara(奈良県大和郡山市南郡山町232)Japan
Kintetsu Kōriyama Station (近鉄郡山駅, Kintetsu Kōriyama-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Yamatokōriyama, Nara, Japan.
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103.Kintetsu Gose Station  ・180-1 (Suehirocho), Gose, Nara(奈良県御所市180-1(末広町))Japan
Kintetsu Gose Station (近鉄御所駅, Kintetsu-Gose-eki) is a railway station in Gose, Nara Prefecture, Japan. This station has a transfer to JR Gose Station on the Wakayama Line.
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104.Kintetsu Shimoda Station  ・
Kintetsu-Shimoda Station (近鉄下田駅, Kintetsu-Shimoda-eki) is a railway station in Kashiba, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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105.Kintetsu Shinjō Station  ・157-4, Kakinomoto, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市柿本157-4)Japan
Kintetsu Shinjō Station (近鉄新庄駅, Kintetsu Shinjō-eki) is a train station in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The station has two side platforms and two tracks.
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106.Kujō Station (Nara)  ・375, Aza-deguchi, Kujochō, YamatokōriyamaNara Japan (奈良県大和郡山市九条町字出口375)
Kujō Station (九条駅) is a railway station in Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line.
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107.Kuzu Station  ・981–3, Toge, GoseNara(奈良県御所市戸毛981-3)Japan
Kuzu Station (葛駅, Kuzu-eki) is a train station in Gose, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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108.Kusurimizu Station  ・1085, Kusurimizu, ŌyodoNara(奈良県吉野郡大淀町薬水1085)Japan
Kusurimizu Station (薬水駅, Kusurimizu-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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109.Kuroda Station (Nara)  ・277-2345, Ōaza Kuroda, Tawaramoto,Nara, Japan (奈良県磯城郡田原本町大字黒田277-2345)
Kuroda Station (黒田駅, Kuroda-eki) is a railway station in Tawaramoto, Nara, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu Railway's Tawaramoto Line. It is 2.0 km (1.2 mi) from Nishi-Tawaramoto, while 8.1 km (5.0 miles) from Shin-Ōji.
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110.Goidō Station  ・268, Kawaraguchi, Kashiba, Nara(奈良県香芝市瓦口268)Japan
Goido Station (五位堂駅, Goidō-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Osaka Line in Kashiba, Nara, Japan, and is the central station in the eastern area of the city.[1]
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111.Kōriyama Station (Nara)  ・108-3, Takada-chō, Yamato-Kōriyama, Nara(奈良県大和郡山市高田町108-3)Japan
Kōriyama Station (郡山駅, Kōriyama eki) is a railway station on the Kansai Main Line (Yamatoji Line) of West Japan Railway Company (JR West) in Yamato-Kōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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112.Koshibe Station  ・4, Koshibe, ŌyodoNara(奈良県吉野郡大淀町越部4)Japan
Koshibe Station (越部駅, Koshibe-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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113.Gojō Station (Nara)  ・1-91, Sue 3-chōme, GojōNara Japan (奈良県五條市須恵3丁目1-91)
Gojō Station (五条駅, Gojō-eki) is a train station in Gojō, Nara, Japan.
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114.Gose Station  ・153-2, (Kokutetsu-Gose-ekimae-dori,) GoseNara Japan (奈良県御所市(国鉄御所駅前通り)153-2)
Gose Station (御所駅, Gose-eki) is a railway station in Gose, Nara, Japan. Kintetsu Gose Station is located near the station.
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115.Sakurai Station (Nara)  ・ JR-West: 191-1, Sakurai, Sakurai(奈良県桜井市桜井191-1番地) Kintetsu: 190-2, Sakurai, Sakurai(奈良県桜井市桜井190-2) Nara PrefectureJapan
Sakurai Station (桜井駅, Sakurai-eki) is a railway station in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan.[1] Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services. Sakurai Station is also served by the Osaka Line of the Kintetsu Railway.
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116.Samitagawa Station  ・281-1, Ōaza Jōnai, Kawai, Kitakatsuragi,Nara Japan (奈良県北葛城郡河合町大字城内281-1)
Samitagawa Station (佐味田川駅, Samitagawa-eki) is a railway station in Kawai, Kitakatsuragi, Nara, Japan.
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117.Sangō Station (Nara)  ・10-17, Tatsunominami 2-chome, Sangō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡三郷町立野南二丁目10-17)Japan
Sangō Station (三郷駅, Sangō-eki) is a railway station in Sangō, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Sangō station opened on 3 March 1980.[1] Station numbering was introduced in March 2018 with Sangō being assigned station number JR-Q30.[2][3]
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118.Sambommatsu Station (Nara)  ・2937, Murō-Sambommatsu, Uda, Nara(奈良県宇陀市室生三本松2937)Japan
Sambommatsu Station (三本松駅, Sambommatsu-eki) is a railway station in Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Sambommatsu Station has two opposed side platforms.
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119.JR Goidō Station  ・55, Goidō 6-chōme, KashibaNara Japan (奈良県香芝市五位堂6丁目55番)
JR Goidō Station (JR五位堂駅, Jeiāru Goidō-eki) is a railway station on the Wakayama Line of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Kashiba, Nara, Japan.
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120.Shigisanshita Station  ・4-1, Seyanishi 1-chome, Sangō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡三郷町勢野西一丁目4番1号)Japan
Shigisanshita Station (信貴山下駅, Shigisanshita-eki) is a train station in Sangō, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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121.Shizumi Station  ・188, Kaminaka, KashibaNara Japan (奈良県香芝市上中188番地)
Shizumi Station (志都美駅, Shizumi-eki) is a train station in Kashiba, Nara, Japan.
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122.Shimoichiguchi Station  ・875, Shimobuchi, ŌyodoNara Japan (奈良県吉野郡大淀町下渕875)
Shimoichiguchi Station (下市口駅, Shimoichiguchi-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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123.Shakudo Station  ・228, Shakudo, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市尺土228)Japan
Shakudo Station (尺土駅, Shakudo-eki) is a railway station owned by Kintetsu Corporation in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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124.Sekiya Station (Nara)  ・
Sekiya Station (関屋駅, Sekiya-eki) is a railway station in Kashiba, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Osaka Line operated by the Kintetsu Railway. Sekiya Station has two side platforms serving two tracks. 34°33′14″N 135°40′04″E / 34.55389°N 135.66778°E / 34.55389; 135.66778
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125.Seya-Kitaguchi Station  ・3-50 Seyahigashi 4-chōme, Sangō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡三郷町勢野東四丁目3-50)Japan
Seya-Kitaguchi Station (勢野北口駅, Seya-Kitaguchi-eki) is a train station in Sangō, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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126.Senzai Station  ・290-6, Sugimotochō, TenriNara Japan (奈良県天理市杉本町290-6)
Senzai Station (前栽駅, Senzai eki) is a railway station in Tenri, Nara, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu Railway's Tenri Line. It is 3.2 km (2.0 mi) from Hirahata, while 1.3 km (0.81 mi) from Tenrii.
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127.Daifuku Station  ・Sakurai, NaraJapan
Daifuku Station (大福駅, Daifuku-eki) is a train station in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. This station has two side platforms a track each.
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128.Taimadera Station  ・54-2, Taima, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市當麻54-2)Japan
Taimadera Station (当麻寺駅, Taimadera-eki) is a railway station in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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129.Takada Station (Nara)  ・1-1, Takasagochō, Yamatotakada CityNara PrefectureJapan
Takada Station (高田駅, Takada-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR West) in Yamatotakada, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services. The station is also served by the Wakayama Line. There is a transfer to Yamato-Takada Station on the Osaka Line of Kintetsu Railway.
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130.Takadashi Station  ・17-4, Katashio-chō, Yamatotakada, Nara(奈良県大和高田市片塩町17-4)Japan
Takadashi Station (高田市駅, Takadashi-eki) is a railway station in Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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131.Tajima Station (Nara)  ・263, Ōaza Tajima, MiyakeNara Japan (奈良県磯城郡三宅町大字但馬263)
Tajima Station (但馬駅, Tajima-eki) is a railway station in Miyake, Shiki District, Nara Prefecture, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu Railway's Tawaramoto Line. It is 3.0 km (1.9 mi) from Nishi-Tawaramoto, while 7.1 km (4.4 miles) from Shin-Ōji.
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132.Tatsutagawa Station  ・7-12, Nishinomiya 2-chōme, Heguri, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡平群町西宮二丁目7-12)Japan
Tatsutagawa Station (竜田川駅, Tatsutagawa-eki) is a train station in Heguri, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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133.Tamade Station (Nara)  ・132, Ōaza Tamade, GoseNara Japan (奈良県御所市大字玉手132)
Tamade Station (玉手駅, Tamade-eki) is a train station in Gose, Nara, Japan.
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134.Tawaramoto Station  ・171, TawaramotoNara Japan (奈良県磯城郡田原本町171)
Tawaramoto Station (田原本駅) is a train station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Tawaramoto, Nara, Japan.
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135.Tsukiyama Station  ・YamatotakadaNara PrefectureJapan
Tsukiyama Station (築山駅, Tsukiyama-eki) is a railway station in Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, Japan, operated by Kintetsu Railway.
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136.Tsutsui Station (Nara)  ・640, Tsutsuichō Hachiōji, YamatokōriyamaNara(奈良県大和郡山市筒井町八王寺640)Japan
Tsutsui Station (筒井駅) is a railway station in Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line.
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137.Tsubosakayama Station  ・886, Kangakuji, TakatoriNara(奈良県高市郡高取町観覚寺886)Japan
Tsubosakayama Station (壺阪山駅, Tsubosakayama-eki) is a train station located on the Kintetsu Yoshino Line in Takatori, Takaichi District, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Tsubosakadera temple and Takatori castle are near the station.[1]
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138.Tenri Station  ・JR-West: 816, Kawaharajōchō, TenriKintetsu Railway: 815, Kawaharajōchō, TenriNaraJapanJR-West: (奈良県天理市川原城町816番地)Kintetsu Railway: (奈良県天理市川原城町815番地)
Tenri Station (天理駅, Tenri-eki) is a train station in Tenri, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services. Tenri Station is also served by the Tenri Line of the Kintetsu Railway.
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139.Nagara Station  ・176-3, Hyōgochō, TenriNaraJapan(奈良県天理市兵庫町176-3番地)
Nagara Station (長柄駅, Nagara-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Tenri, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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140.Nikaidō Station  ・147-2, Nikaidō kaminoshōchō, TenriNara Japan (奈良県天理市二階堂上ノ庄町147-2)
Nikaidō Station (二階堂駅, Nikaidō eki) is a railway station in Tenri, Nara, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu (Kintesu Railway)'s Tenri Line. It is 1.3 km (0.81 mi) from Hirahata and 3.2 km (2.0 mi) from Tenrii.
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141.Nijō Station (Nara)  ・
Nijō Station (二上駅, Nijō-eki) is a railway station in Kashiba, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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142.Nijōzan Station  ・106-2, Hata 4-chōme, Kashiba, Nara(奈良県香芝市畑四丁目106-2)Japan
Nijōzan Station (二上山駅, Nijōzan-eki) is a railway station in Kashiba, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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143.Nijō-jinjaguchi Station  ・544, Kamori, Katsuragi, Nara(奈良県葛城市加守544)Japan
Nijō-jinjaguchi Station (二上神社口駅, Nijō-jinjaguchi-eki) is a railway station in Katsuragi, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The station has two side platforms and two tracks. Express trains stop at this station and adjacent Taimadera Station during the peony season in spring.
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144.Haibara Station  ・2426, Hagiwara, Haibara, Uda, Nara(奈良県宇陀市榛原萩原2426)Japan
Haibara Station (榛原駅, Haibara-eki) is a train station on the Kintetsu Osaka Line in Hagiwara, Haibara, Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan, representing the city of Uda. Haibara Station has one side platform and two island platforms serving 5 tracks under the station building.
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145.Hashio Station  ・312-2, Ōaza Kayano, Kōryō,Nara, Japan (奈良県北葛城郡広陵町大字萱野312-2)
Hashio Station (箸尾駅, Hashio-eki) is a railway station in Kōryō, Nara, Japan, serving passengers traveling on Kintetsu Railway's Tawaramoto Line. It is 4.5 km (2.8 mi) from Nishi-Tawaramoto, while 5.6 km (3.5 miles) from Shin-Ōji.
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146.Hasedera Station  ・SakuraiNara PrefectureJapan
Hasedera Station (長谷寺駅, Hasedera-eki) is a train station in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan, operated by Kintetsu Railway.
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147.Hatakeda Station  ・9, Hatakeda 3-chōme, Ōji, Kitakatsuragi,Nara Japan (奈良県北葛城郡王寺町畠田3丁目9番)
Hatakeda Station (畠田駅, Hatakeda-eki) is a train station in Ōji, Nara, Japan.
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148.Hirahata Station  ・51, Shōwachō, Yamato-KoriyamaNara(奈良県大和郡山市昭和町51)Japan
Hirahata Station (平端駅) is a railway station of Kintetsu Kashihara Line, located in Yamato-Koriyama, Nara, Japan. The Tenri Line diverts from this station.
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149.Family-Kōemmae Station  ・339-2, Miyadochō, Yamato-KoriyamaNara Japan (奈良県大和郡山市宮堂字毘沙門339-2)
Family-Kōemmae Station (ファミリー公園前駅, Famirīkōenmae eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Yamatokōriyama, Nara, Japan.
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150.Fukugami Station  ・599-4, Kusurimizu, ŌyodoNara(奈良県吉野郡大淀町薬水599-4)Japan
Fukugami Station (福神駅, Fukugami-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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151.Heguri Station  ・Yoshishin 4-chōme, Heguri, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡平群町吉新四丁目)Japan
Heguri Station (平群駅, Heguri-eki) is a train station in Heguri, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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152.Hōryūji Station  ・1-1, Okidome Kyuchome, Ikaruga, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡斑鳩町興留九丁目1-1)Japan
Hōryūji Station (法隆寺駅, Hōryūji-eki) is a railway station on the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) Kansai Main Line (Yamatoji Line) in the town of Ikaruga, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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153.Makimuku Station  ・36, Ōaza Tsuji, SakuraiNaraJapan(奈良県桜井市大字辻36番地)
Makimuku Station (巻向駅, Makimuku-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Sakurai, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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154.Matsuzuka Station  ・YamatotakadaNara PrefectureJapan
Matsuzuka Station (松塚駅, Matsuzuka-eki) is a railway station in Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, Japan, operated by Kintetsu Railway.
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155.Miwa Station  ・Ōaza Miwa, SakuraiNaraJapan(奈良県桜井市大字三輪)
Miwa Station (三輪駅, Miwa-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Sakurai, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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156.Muda Station  ・42-1, Kitamuda, ŌyodoNara(奈良県吉野郡大淀町北六田42-1)Japan
Muda Station (六田駅, Muda-eki) is a train station in Ōyodo, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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157.Murōguchi-Ōno Station  ・1756, Ōno, Murō, Uda, Nara(奈良県宇陀市室生区大野1756)Japan
Murōguchi-Ōno Station (室生口大野駅, Murōguchi-Ōno-eki) is a train station in Uda, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Murōguchi-Ōno Station has two opposed side platforms.
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158.Motosanjōguchi Station  ・Shidehara, Heguri, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒郡平群町椣原)Japan
Motosanjōguchi Station (元山上口駅, Motosanjōguchi-eki) is a train station in Heguri, Ikoma District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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159.Yanagimoto Station  ・1306, Yanagimotochō, TenriNaraJapan(奈良県天理市柳本町1306番地)
Yanagimoto Station (柳本駅, Yanagimoto-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Tenri, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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160.Yamato-Asakura Station  ・1029, Ōaza Jionji, Sakurai, Nara(奈良県桜井市大字慈恩寺1029)Japan
Yamato-Asakura Station (大和朝倉駅, Yamato-Asakura-eki) is a railway station in Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The station has two island platforms serving two tracks each.
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161.Yamato-Kamiichi Station  ・2044, Kamiichi, YoshinoNara(奈良県吉野郡吉野町上市2044)Japan
Yamato-Kamiichi Station (大和上市駅, Yamato-Kamiichi-eki) is a train station in Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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162.Yamato-Koizumi Station  ・492-3, Koizumicho, Yamatokoriyama, Nara(奈良県大和郡山市小泉町492-3)Japan
Yamato-Koizumi Station (大和小泉駅, Yamato-Koizumi-eki) is a railway station on the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) Kansai Main Line (Yamatoji Line) in the city of Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is administrated by Ōji Station.
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163.Yamato-Shinjō Station  ・1-1, Kitahanauchi, Katsuragi,Nara Japan (奈良県葛城市北花内676-3)
Yamato-Shinjō Station (大和新庄駅, Yamato-shinjō-eki) is a train station in Katsuragi, Nara, Japan.
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164.Yamato-Takada Station  ・
Yamato-Takada Station (大和高田駅, Yamato-Takada-eki) is a railway station in Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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165.Yamato-Futami Station  ・1-1, Futami 3-chōme, GojōNara Japan (奈良県五條市ニ見3丁目1-1)
Yamato-Futami Station (大和二見駅, Yamato-Futami-eki) is a train station in Gojō, Nara, Japan. Operated by West Japan Railway Company on the Wakayama Line.[1][2]
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166.Yūzaki Station  ・3584, Yūzaki deyashiki, KawanishiNara Japan (奈良県磯城郡川西町結崎出屋敷584)
Yūzaki Station (結崎駅) is a train station in Kawanishi, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line.
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167.Yoshino Station (Nara)  ・6261, Yoshinoyama, YoshinoNara(奈良県吉野郡吉野町吉野山6261)Japan
Yoshino Station (吉野駅, Yoshino-eki) is the terminus on the Kintetsu Railway Yoshino Line in Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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168.Yoshinoguchi Station  ・442, Furuse, GoseNara Japan (奈良県御所市古瀬442)
Yoshinoguchi Station (吉野口駅, Yoshinoguchi-eki) is a train station in Gose, Nara Prefecture, Japan, administrated by West Japan Railway Company (JR-West).
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169.Yoshino-Jingū Station  ・137-2, Tanji, YoshinoNara(奈良県吉野郡吉野町丹治137-2)Japan
Yoshino-Jingū Station (吉野神宮駅, Yoshino-Jingū-eki) is a train station in Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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170.Wakigami Station  ・146, Ōaza Kashihara, GoseNara Japan (奈良県御所市大字柏原146)
Wakigami Station (掖上駅, Wakigami-eki) is a train station in Gose, Nara, Japan.
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171.Ikoma Station  ・1-1, Motomachi Itchōme, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市元町一丁目1-1)Japan
Ikoma Station (生駒駅) is a railway station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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172.Ikoma-Sanjō Station  ・2312-51, Nabata-cho, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市菜畑町2312-51)Japan
Ikoma-Sanjō Station (生駒山上駅, Ikoma-Sanjō-eki) is a funicular station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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173.Ichibu Station (Nara)  ・902-3, Ichibu-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市壱分町902-3)Japan
Ichibu Station (一分駅, Ichibu-eki) is a station in Ikoma City, Nara Prefecture, Japan, on the Kintetsu Ikoma Line of the Kintetsu Railway. The name of 'Ichibu' can be found in a record written in 8th century, as a place of the residence of Prince Arima in the 7th century.
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174.Umeyashiki Station (Nara)  ・18-1, Monzen-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市門前町18-1)Japan
Umeyashiki Station (梅屋敷駅, Umeyashiki-eki) is a funicular station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Umeyashiki Station has a single side platform serving bi-directional traffic.
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175.Kasumigaoka Station (Nara)  ・2312-45, Nabata-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市菜畑町2312-45)Japan
Kasumigaoka Station (霞ヶ丘駅, Kasumigaoka-eki) is a funicular station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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176.Gakken Kita-Ikoma Station  ・3535-6, Kamimachi, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市上町3535-6)Japan
Gakken Kita-Ikoma Station (学研北生駒駅, Gakken Kita-Ikoma-eki) is a train station on the Kintetsu Keihanna Line in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is the nearest station to Nara Institute of Science and Technology.
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177.Shiraniwadai Station  ・11-1, Shiraniwadai 6-chome, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市白庭台六丁目11-1)Japan
Shiraniwadai Station (白庭台駅, Shiraniwadai-eki) is a train station on the Kintetsu Keihanna Line in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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178.Nabata Station  ・Nakanabata 1-chōme, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市中菜畑一丁目)Japan
Nabata Station (菜畑駅, Nabata-eki) is a train station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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179.Haginodai Station  ・3-1, Haginodai 1-chōme, IkomaNara Japan (奈良県生駒市萩の台一丁目3-1)
Haginodai Station (萩の台駅, Haginodai-eki) is a train station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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180.Higashi-Ikoma Station  ・1-6, Higashi-Ikoma 1-chome, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市東生駒一丁目1-6)Japan
Higashi-Ikoma Station (東生駒駅) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Nara Line in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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181.Higashiyama Station (Nara)  ・Higashiyama-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市東山町)Japan
Higashiyama Station (東山駅, Higashiyama-eki) is a train station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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182.Hōzanji Station  ・10-1, Monzen-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市門前町10-1)Japan
Hōzanji Station (宝山寺駅, Hōzanji-eki) is a funicular station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan, on the Kintetsu Ikoma Cable Line.
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183.Minami-Ikoma Station  ・Oze-chō, Ikoma, Nara(奈良県生駒市小瀬町)Japan
Minami-Ikoma Station (南生駒駅, Minami-Ikoma-eki) is a train station in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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184.Unebi Station  ・1-9, Yagi-chō 2-chōme, KashiharaNaraJapan(奈良県橿原市八木町二丁目1-9)
Unebi Station (畝傍駅, Unebi-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Kashihara, Nara, Japan. Although it is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, its passenger train services have been provided by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010. The station is a transfer point to Yagi-nishiguchi Station on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line.
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185.Unebigoryōmae Station  ・455, Okubochō, KashiharaNara Japan (奈良県橿原市大久保町455)
Unebigoryōmae Station (畝傍御陵前駅, Unebigoryōmae Eki) is a railway station on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line. It is located in Kashihara, Nara, Japan. The station name refers to Unebi Goryō, the tomb of legendary Emperor Jimmu located about 700 meters west of the station.
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186.Okadera Station  ・590, Mise-chō, KashiharaNara(奈良県橿原市見瀬町590)Japan
Okadera Station (岡寺駅, Okadera-eki) is a railway station located in Kashihara, Nara, Japan. The station was named after Oka-dera, a Buddhist temple located east of the station. However, the temple recommends visitors use Kashiharajingū-mae Station for bus connections since there is no public transit service from Okadera Station to it.[1]
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187.Kaguyama Station  ・51, Degaitochō, KashiharaNaraJapan * (奈良県橿原市出垣内町51番地)
Kaguyama Station (香久山駅, Kaguyama-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Kashihara, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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188.Kashiharajingū-nishiguchi Station  ・376-2, Nishiikejiri-chō, Kashihara, Nara(奈良県橿原市西池尻町376-2)Japan
Kashiharajingū-nishiguchi Station (橿原神宮西口駅, Kashiharajingū-nishiguchi-eki) is a railway station in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The station has two side platforms and two tracks
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189.Kashiharajingū-mae Station  ・618, Kumechō, KashiharaNara(奈良県橿原市久米町618)Japan
Kashiharajingū-mae Station (橿原神宮前駅, Kashiharajingū-mae-eki) is a train station located in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It is on Kintetsu Kashihara Line, Minami Osaka Line and Yoshino Lines. It is one of the major stations on the Kintetsu lines and all trains in service stop at this station. The center station building was designed by Togo Murano, an architect representing the 20th century.
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190.Kanahashi Station  ・7-1, Magarikawa-chō 5-chōme, KashiharaNaraJapan(奈良県橿原市曲川町五丁目7-1)
Kanahashi Station (金橋駅, Kanahashi-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Kashihara, Nara, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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191.Ninokuchi Station  ・127, Ninokuchichō, KashiharaNara Japan (奈良県橿原市新口町127)
Ninokuchi Station (新ノ口駅, Ninokuchi-eki) is a railway station on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Ninokuchi, Kashihara, Nara, Japan.[1]
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192.Bōjō Station  ・281-2, Higashibōjō-chō, Kashihara, Nara(奈良県橿原市東坊城町281-2)Japan
Bōjō Station (坊城駅, Bōjō-eki) is a railway station in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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193.Masuga Station  ・1070, Soga-cho, Kashihara, Nara(奈良県橿原市曽我町1070)Japan
Masuga Station (真菅駅, Masuga-eki) is a railway station in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. This station has 2 side platforms on the ground, serving a track each.
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194.Miminashi Station  ・208-2, Ishiharada-cho, Kashihara, Nara(奈良県橿原市石原田町208-2)Japan
Miminashi Station (耳成駅, Miminashi-eki) is a railway station in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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195.Yagi-nishiguchi Station  ・1-8-32, Yagichō, KashiharaNara Japan (奈良県橿原市八木町1丁目8-32)
Yagi-nishiguchi Station (八木西口駅, Yagi-nishiguchi-eki) is a railway station on the Kintetsu Kashihara Line, located in Kashihara, Nara, Japan.[1] It is a typical small station, but has a unique status as a non-independent station. For a historical reason, the station is a part of Yamato-Yagi Station, a large intersection station located about 300 meters north of the station.
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196.Yamato-Yagi Station  ・5-1-2 Naizenchō, Kashihara, Nara(奈良県橿原市内膳町5丁目1-2)Japan
Yamato-Yagi Station (大和八木駅, Yamato-Yagi-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line and Osaka Lines in Kashihara, Nara, Japan, operated by Kintetsu Railway. It is a major station on the lines to and from Osaka, Nara, Kyoto, and Nagoya.
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197.Amagatsuji Station  ・11-1, Amagatsuji-Nakamachi, Nara(奈良県奈良市尼辻中町11-1)Nara PrefectureJapan
Amagatsuji Station (尼ヶ辻駅, Amagatsuji-eki) is a railway station on the Kashihara Line in the city of Nara, Japan, operated by Kintetsu Railway.
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198.Ayameike Station  ・2-1, Ayameike-minami Nichome, Nara(奈良県奈良市あやめ池南二丁目2-1)Japan
Ayameike Station (菖蒲池駅) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Nara Line in Nara, Japan.
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199.Obitoke Station  ・250 Imaichichō 1-chōme, NaraNara PrefectureJapan(奈良県奈良市今市町1丁目250)
Obitoke Station (帯解駅, Obitoke-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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200.Gakuen-mae Station (Nara)  ・1-1, Gakuen-minami 3-chome, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市学園南三丁目1-1)Japan
Gakuen-mae Station (Tezukayama Gakuen-mae)(学園前駅 (帝塚山学園前)) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Nara Line in Nara, Japan.
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201.Gakken Nara-Tomigaoka Station  ・1-1, Naka-Tomigaoka 6-chome, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市中登美ヶ丘六丁目1-1)Japan
Gakken Nara-Tomigaoka Station (学研奈良登美ヶ丘駅, Gakken Nara-Tomigaoka-eki) is a train station serving as the terminus of the Kintetsu Keihanna Line in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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202.Kyōbate Station  ・211 Minamikyōbatechō, Nara CityNara PrefectureJapan
Kyōbate Station (京終駅, Kyōbate-eki) is a train station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Although the station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services.
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203.Kintetsu Nara Station  ・29 Higashimuki-Nakamachi, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市東向中町29)Japan
Kintetsu Nara Station (近鉄奈良駅, Kintetsu-Nara-eki) is a railway station on the Nara Line in Nara, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Kintetsu Railway.
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204.Shin-Ōmiya Station  ・15-5, Shibatsuji-chō 4-chōme, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市芝辻町四丁目15-5)Japan
Shin-Ōmiya Station (新大宮駅, Shin-Ōmiya-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Nara Line, located in the city of Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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205.Takanohara Station  ・12-3, Suzaku 3-chome, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市朱雀三丁目12-3)Japan
Takanohara Station (高の原駅, Takanohara-eki) is a railway station in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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206.Tomio Station  ・3-35, Tomiomotomachi 2-chome, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市富雄元町二丁目3-35)Japan
Tomio Station (富雄駅, Tomio-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Nara Line in Nara, Japan.
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207.Nara Station  ・1-1, Sanjo-Hommachi, Nara CityNara PrefectureJapan
Nara Station (奈良駅, Nara-eki) is a railway station located in Nara, Japan. Operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West), it is the main stop in the city of Nara on the Kansai Main Line (Yamatoji Line), the terminus for the Sakurai Line (Man-yō Mahoroba Line), and Nara Line trains for Kyoto begin here and run on the Kansai Line to Kizu before diverging. Also, a limited number of Gakkentoshi Line trains terminate here via Kizu during early mornings and late nights.
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208.Narayama Station  ・1-840-1 Sahodai, Nara CityNara PrefectureJapan
Narayama Station (平城山駅, Narayama-eki) is a railway station of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. Although the station is on the Kansai Main Line as rail infrastructure, it is served by both the Nara Line and the Yamatoji Line in terms of passenger train services. It has the station numbers "JR-Q37" (Yamatoji Line) and "JR-D20" (Nara Line).
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209.Nishinokyō Station  ・408, Nishinokyōchō, NaraNara(奈良県奈良市西ノ京町字金岡408)Japan
Nishinokyō Station (西ノ京駅, Nishinokyō-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Kashihara Line in Nara, Japan.
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210.Heijō Station  ・Miyanomae, Misasagi, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市山陵町宮の前)Japan
Heijō Station (平城駅, Heijō-eki) is a railway station on Kintetsu Railway's Kyoto Line in Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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211.Yamato-Saidaiji Station  ・1-1, Saidaiji Kunimichō Itchōme, Nara, Nara(奈良県奈良市西大寺国見町1丁目1-1)Japan
Yamato-Saidaiji Station (大和西大寺駅, Yamato Saidaiji-eki) is a railway station owned by Kintetsu Railway and located in Saidaiji Kunimichō Itchōme, a suburb of the city of Nara in Japan. The station is also called Kintetsu Saidaiji Station (近鉄西大寺駅) or Saidaiji Station (西大寺駅).
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Nara Prefecture in park

212.Kōya-Ryūjin Quasi-National Park  ・Nara/Wakayama Prefecture, Japan
Kōya-Ryūjin Quasi-National Park (高野竜神国定公園, Kōya-Ryūjin Kokutei Kōen) is a Quasi-National Park in Nara and Wakayama Prefectures, Japan. It was established in 1967.[2][3]
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213.Asuka Historical National Government Park  ・Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan
Asuka Historical National Government Park (国営飛鳥歴史公園, Kokuei Asuka Rekishi Kōen) is a National Government Park established in Asuka, Nara Prefecture, Japan in 1974.[1] The park comprises five areas: the Amakashi-no-Oka Area, where there is an observatory with a view over the old capitals of Asuka and Fujiwara-kyō and of Yamato Sanzan; the Iwaido Area, similarly with views to Yamato Sanzan as well as over the terraced rice fields of "Inner Asuka"; the Ishibutai Area; the Takamatsuzuka Area; and the Kitora Tumulus Area.[2]
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214.Kongō-Ikoma-Kisen Quasi-National Park  ・Kansai, Japan
Kongō-Ikoma-Kisen Quasi-National Park (金剛生駒紀泉国定公園, Kongō-Ikoma-Kisen Kokutei Kōen) is a Quasi-National Park in Nara, Ōsaka, and Wakayama Prefectures, Japan. It was established in 1958.[2][3]
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215.Nara Prefectural Museum of Folklore  ・
Nara Prefectural Museum of Folklore (奈良県立民俗博物館, Nara Kenritsu Minzoku Hakubutsukan) opened in Yamatokōriyama, Nara Prefecture, Japan, in 1974. Located at the foot of the Yata Hills (矢田丘陵) within the 26.6 hectare Yamato Folk Park (大和民俗公園), the Museum collects, preserves, and displays artefacts relating to everyday life in Nara Prefecture from the Edo period to the Shōwa 40s. Among the forty-two thousand objects in the collection are 1,908 relating to forestry in the Yoshino District that have been jointly designated an Important Cultural Property. In the adjacent park are fifteen Edo-period minka, relocated from elsewhere in the prefecture, including the Former Usui Family Residence (旧臼井家住宅) (ICP).[1][2][3][4]
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216.Nara Park  ・
Nara Park (奈良公園, Nara Kōen) is a public park located in the city of Nara, Japan, at the foot of Mount Wakakusa. Established in 1880, it is one of the oldest parks in Japan. Administratively, the park is under the control of Nara Prefecture. The park is one of the "Places of Scenic Beauty" designated by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). Over 1,200 wild sika deer (シカ or 鹿 shika) freely roaming around in the park are also under designation of MEXT, classified as natural treasure. While the official size of the park is about 502 hectares (1,240 acres), the area including the grounds of Tōdai-ji, Kōfuku-ji, Kasuga Grand Shrine and Nara National Museum, which are either on the edge or surrounded by Nara Park, is as large as 660 hectares (1,600 acres).
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217.Murō-Akame-Aoyama Quasi-National Park  ・Mie/Nara Prefecture, Japan
Murō-Akame-Aoyama Quasi-National Park (室生赤目青山国定公園, Murō-Akame-Aoyama Kokutei Kōen) is a Quasi-National Park in Mie and Nara Prefectures, Japan. It was established in 1970.[2][3]
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218.Yamato-Aogaki Quasi-National Park  ・Nara Prefecture, Japan
Yamato-Aogaki Quasi-National Park (大和青垣国定公園, Yamato-Aogaki Kokutei Kōen) is a Quasi-National Park in northeast Nara Prefecture, Japan. Established in 1970, the park consists of one continuous area spanning the borders of the municipalities of Nara, Tenri, and Sakurai. The park encompasses Mount Miwa, Byakugō-ji (白毫寺), Shōryaku-ji (正暦寺), Enshō-ji, Kōnin-ji (弘仁寺), Isonokami Jingū, Chōgaku-ji, Ōmiwa Jinja, and Hase-dera, as well as a number of kofun.[1][2][3]
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219.Yoshino-Kumano National Park  ・Kansai, Japan
Yoshino-Kumano National Park (吉野熊野国立公園, Yoshino-Kumano Kokuritsu Kōen) is a national park comprising several non-contiguous areas of Mie, Nara, and Wakayama Prefectures, in the Kansai region of Japan. Established in 1936, the park includes Mount Yoshino, celebrated for its cherry blossoms, as well as elements of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range.[1][2]
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220.Mount Kinpu  ・
Mount Kinpu (金峰山, Kinpu-san), or Mount Kinpō (金峰山, Kinpō-san) is a mountain and the main peak in the Okuchichibu Range in Kantō Mountains.[2] It is located in Chichibu-Tama-Kai National Park[3] on the boundary of Nagano Prefecture and Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan.[4]It has the sacred Gojoiwa rock, a Shinto holy site,[5] on its top and is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.[6] At 2599 m tall,[1] it is the second highest peak of the Okuchichibu Mountains.
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Nara Prefecture in Mountain

221.Mount Takamagahara
Mount Takamagahara (高天原山, Takamagahara-yama) is a mountain in the Gunma Prefecture of Japan, near Ueno village. Its measurement is 1,978.6 metres (6,491 ft 6 in) tall. Takamagahara is the world of heaven in Japanese mythology. The crash of Japan Air Lines Flight 123 on 12 August 1985 was initially reported on Mount Osutaka, but later confirmed to be on the ridge of Mount Takamagahara at a height of approximately 1,565 metres (5,135 ft) above sea level. With the loss of 520 people, it was the deadliest single-aircraft accident in aviation history.[1]
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222.Mount Azami
Mount Azami (薊岳, Azamidake) is a 1,406 m (4,613 ft) mountain, located on the border of Higashiyoshino and Kawakami, Nara, Japan.
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223.Mount Amanokagu
Mount Amanokagu (天香久山, Amanokagu-yama) is a mountain in the city of Kashihara, in the central-western part Nara Prefecture, Japan. Together with Mount Unebi and Mount Miminashi, it belongs to the so-called "Yamato Sanzan". It is at the end of Ryumon Mountains that continues from Mount Tatake in comparison to the other two mountains being a sole peak.[2]
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224.Mount Ikoma
Mount Ikoma (生駒山, Ikoma-yama) is a mountain on the border of Nara Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture in Japan. It is the highest peak in the Ikoma Mountains with a height of 642 meters. Mount Ikoma is a part of Kongō-Ikoma-Kisen Quasi-National Park. It is one of the most famous picnic spots in the Kansai region. On the top of the mountain, there are many TV towers for broadcasting to the Kansai region and Ikoma Sanjo Amusement Park.
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225.Mount Unebi
Mount Unebi (畝傍山, Unebi-yama) is a mountain in the city of Kashihara, in the central-western part Nara Prefecture, Japan. Together with Mount Amanokagu and Mount Miminashi, it belongs to the so-called "Yamato Sanzan", in which it is the highest.[2] At the foot of the mountain are gneiss new rocks, and part of the middle slope and higher are biotite and andesite. At the top is a funnel of an extinct crater.
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226.Mount Ōdaigahara
Ōdaigahara-san or Ōdaigahara-yama (大台ヶ原山), also Hinode-ga-take or Hide-ga-take (日出ヶ岳) is a mountain in the Daikō Mountain Range on the border between the prefectures of Mie and Nara, Japan. It is the highest in Mie at 1,695 metres (5,561 ft). Walking trails from the Nara side start from a car park at about 1400 metres. The mountain is famous for wild deer, and also for wild birds, especially wrens and Japanese robins, as well as treecreepers and woodpeckers. In 1980, an area of 36,000 hectares in the region of Mount Ōdaigahara and Mount Ōmine was designated a UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Reserve.[1]
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227.Mount Ōmine
Mount Ōmine (大峰山, Ōmine-san), is a sacred mountain in Nara, Japan, famous for its three tests of courage. Officially known as Mount Sanjō (山上ヶ岳, Sanjō-ga-take), it is more popularly known as Mount Ōmine due to its prominence in the Ōmine mountain range. It is located in Yoshino-Kumano National Park in the Kansai region, Honshū, Japan.
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228.Mount Ōtenjō
Mount Ōtenjō (大天井ヶ岳, Ōtenjō-ga-dake) is a 1,438.7 m (4,720 ft) mountain of Ōmine Mountain Range, located on the border of Kurotaki and Kawakami, Nara, Japan. This mountain is one of the Kinki 100 mountains. This mountain is on the route of Ōmine Okugakemichi. Ōtenjō literally means ‘the great ceiling’.
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229.Mount Kongō
Mount Kongō (金剛山, Kongō-san) is a 1,125-metre-high (3,691 ft) mountain in the Kawachi region of Osaka Prefecture, Kansai, Japan.[1] It is near Mount Yamato Katsuragi. The mountain has lent its name to a series of naval ships and ship classes: the Imperial Japanese Navy's 1877 ironclad Kongō; the 1912 battleship Kongō, the name ship of her class; and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force's current destroyer Kongō (DDG-173), also the name ship of her class.
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230.Mount Shigi
Mount Shigi (信貴山, Shigisan) is a mountain located in Ikoma District, Nara, Japan.
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231.Mount Shisuniwa
Mount Shisuniwa (四寸岩山, Shisuniwa-san) is a 1,235.6 m (4,054 ft) mountain of Ōmine Mountain Range, located on the border of Kurotaki and Kawakami, Nara, Japan. This mountain is on the route of Ōmine Okugakemichi. Shisuniwa literally means ‘the rock of four “sun” (=13 cm)’. The other names of this mountain are, Mount Yonsun (Yonsuniwa-san) and Mount Moriya (Moriya-dake).
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232.Mount Shakka
Mount Shaka (釈迦ヶ岳, Shaka-ga-take) is a mountain in the Ōmine Mountains in Japan. It marks part of the border between Totsukawa and Shimokitayama in Yoshino District of Nara Prefecture.
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233.Mount Takami
Mount Takami (高見山, Takami-san/Takami-yama) is a 1,248.3 m (4,095 ft) mountain of Daiko Mountains, which is located on the border of Higashiyoshino, Nara, and Matsusaka, Mie, Japan
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234.Mount Naka Katsuragi
Mount Naka Katsuragi (中葛城山, Naka Katsuragi-san) is a mountain in the Kongō Range to the south of Mount Kongō, rising to an elevation of 937.7 metres (3,076 ft). The mountain is situated between Chihayaakasaka, Osaka and Gojō, Nara in Japan. It is known for its trails being generally easy for most hikers, and for its stands of Japanese cedar and large fields of bamboo grass.
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235.Mount Nijō
Mount Nijō(二上山, Nijōzan) is a mountain in the Kongō Range straddling the prefectural border between Taishi, Osaka and Katsuragi, Nara in Japan. Mount Nijō has twin peaks, Odake (517m) and Medake (474m). From the top there are sweeping views of Nara's basin, Osaka plain and Osaka bay. Mount Nijō is located along the Minami Osaka Line of the Kintetsu Railway and is accessible on several different hiking trails on all sides of varying difficulty and length. The mountain forms part of the diamond trail, which is a 45 km-long trail running along the Kongō mountain range separating Nara, Osaka and Wakayama Prefectures. Heading south along the diamond trail is Mount Yamato Katsuragi (about 8.6 km) and Mount Kongō (about 14.1 km).
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236.Mount Hakkyō
Mount Hakkyō (八経ヶ岳, Hakkyō-ga-take) is a 1,914.6 m (6,281 ft) mountain of Omine Mountains, which is located on the border of Tenkawa and Kamikitayama, Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan.
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237.Mount Miminashi
Mount Miminashi (耳成山, Miminashi-yama) is a mountain located in the Nara Basin, in the city of Kashihara, in the central-western part Nara Prefecture, Japan.[2] Together with Mount Unebi and Mount Amanokagu, it belongs to the so-called "Yamato Sanzan".
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238.Mount Myōjin
Mount Myōjin (明神岳, Myōjin-dake) is a 1,432 m (4,698 ft) mountain, on the border of Matsusaka, Mie and Kawakami, Nara, Japan. This mountain is one of Daikō Mountains.
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239.Mount Miwa
Mount Miwa (三輪山, Miwa-yama) or Mount Mimoro (三諸山, Mimoro-yama) is a mountain located in the city of Sakurai, Nara Prefecture, Japan. It has been an important religious and historical mountain in Japan, especially during its early history, and serves as a holy site in Shinto. The entire mountain is considered sacred, and is home to one of the earliest Shinto shrines, Ōmiwa Shrine. Several burial mounds from the Kofun period can be found around the mountain.
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240.Mount Yamato Katsuragi
Mount Yamato Katsuragi (大和葛城山, Yamato Katsuragi-san) or simply Mount Katsuragi is a mountain in the Kongō Range straddling the prefectural border between Chihayaakasaka, Osaka and Gose, Nara in Japan. The peak elevation is 959.2 metres (3,147 ft). The mountain is located along the Gose Line of the Kintetsu Railway.
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241.Yamato Sanzan
Yamato Sanzan (大和三山) or "the three mountains of Yamato", in Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, Japan, are Mount Amanokagu (香具山), Mount Unebi (畝傍山), and Mount Miminashi (耳成山). Celebrated in Japanese poetry, they have been jointly designated a Place of Scenic Beauty.[1][2] Jimmu, first Emperor of Japan, is said to have built his palace on the southeast side of Mt Unebi; he is enshrined at Kashihara Jingū.[3] Archaeological study in the 1990s has shown that, rather than their surrounding Fujiwara-kyō on three sides, the "palace-city" was so large as to encompass the three mountains.[4]
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242.Mount Yoshino
Mount Yoshino (吉野山, Yoshino-yama) is a mountain located in the town of Yoshino in Yoshino District, Nara Prefecture, Japan that is a major religious and literary site. It is renowned for its cherry blossoms and attracts many visitors every spring, when the trees are in blossom. In 2004, Mount Yoshino was designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the name Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range.
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243.Mount Ryūjin
Mount Ryūjin (龍神岳, Ryūjindake) is a mountain on the border between Tanabe, Wakayama and Totsukawa, Nara. At a height of 1,382 m (4,534 ft), it is the highest point in Wakayama Prefecture and the name of the mountain was given in 2008.[1] Ryujindake is the highest peak in Wakayama Prefecture, but Mount Gomadan was recognized as the highest peak until it was found by the Geographical Survey Institute survey in November 2000 that Ryujindake is 10 m higher than Mt. Gomadan and 700 m west.[2] Although the name was not given for a while after the altitude was known, Tanabe City started to solicit names from all over the country in 2008, and on March 3, the following year, the most popular application was "Ryujindake". It was named as "a magnificent, mysterious and familiar name".[2]
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244.Mount Wakakusa
Mount Wakakusa (若草山, Wakakusa-yama), also known as Mount Mikasa (三笠山 Mikasa-yama), is a 342-metre-high (1,122 ft) hill located to the east of Nara Park in the city of Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan. The mountain's name literally means "young grass". The mountain is closed from December 12th to March 17th and cannot be accessed.
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245.Mount Kobushi
Mount Kobushi (甲武信ヶ岳, Kobushigadake) is a mountain on the border of Saitama, Yamanashi, and Nagano prefectures in Japan.[1] The mountain is the source of the Arakawa and Shinano Rivers.[2][3] It is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.
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Nara Prefecture in bridge

246.Tanize Suspension Bridge
Tanize Suspension Bridge (Japanese: 谷瀬の吊り橋, Hepburn: tanize no tsuribashi), alternatively known as the Tanise Suspension Bridge, is a bridge in Totsukawa, Nara. It is one of Japan's oldest and longest extant wire suspension bridges.[1] The bridge, locally known as 谷瀬大橋 (Tanize-ōhashi, lit. 'tanize great bridge') has a commemorative plaque with 谷瀬橋 (tanize-bashi, lit. 'tanize bridge') engraved onto it.[2]
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Nara Prefecture in river

247.Yamato River
The Yamato River (大和川, Yamato-gawa) is a river which flows through Nara Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture, Japan. It is designated Class A by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT). The river flows via towns: Since 1704, the river was reconfigured, originally its flow was north from the Ishikawa River confluence point, where it joined the Shirinashi River and Kizu River.[1]
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248.Tatsuta River
The Tatsuta River (Jap. 竜田川 or たつたがわ, Tatsuta-gawa) is a river in Japan that is a tributary of the Yamato River system. The upper stream is also called the Ikoma River (after Ikoma City), and the middle stream is referred to as the Heguri River (after Heguri).
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Nara Prefecture in Dishes

249.Kudzu powder
Kudzu powder, called géfěn (葛粉) in Chinese, kuzuko (葛粉; くずこ) in Japanese, chik-garu (칡가루) or galbun (갈분; 葛粉) in Korean, and bột sắn dây in Vietnamese is a starch powder made from the root of the kudzu plant. It is used in traditional East Asian cuisine mainly for thickening sauces and making various types of desserts.
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250.Asparagus bean
The asparagus bean (Vigna unguiculata subsp. sesquipedalis) is a legume cultivated for its edible green pods containing immature seeds, like the green bean.[1] It is also known as: yardlong bean, pea bean, long-podded cowpea, Chinese long bean, snake bean,[2] bodi, and bora.[3] Despite the common name of "yardlong", the pods are actually only about half a yard long, so the subspecies name sesquipedalis (one-and-a-half-foot-long; 1.5 feet (0.50 yd)) is a more accurate approximation.
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251.So (dairy product)
So (蘇, originally 酥) was a type of dairy product made in Japan between the seventh and 10th centuries.[1] According to Engishiki, so was introduced from Baekje, and acted as a gift in kind to the emperors.[1] Daigo was produced by further processing of so. The first record of so was made during the era of Emperor Mommu (697–707 AD). Tennyakuryo, then a part of the Ministry of Imperial Household, was responsible for the production of so. It was used as a medicine and as an offering to gods.
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252.Cellophane noodles
Cellophane noodles, or fensi (traditional Chinese: 粉絲; simplified Chinese: 粉丝; pinyin: fěnsī; lit. 'flour thread'), sometimes called glass noodles, are a type of transparent noodle made from starch (such as mung bean starch, potato starch, sweet potato starch, tapioca, or canna starch) and water. A stabilizer such as chitosan (or alum, illegal in some jurisdictions) may also be used.[2]
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253.Yubeshi
Yubeshi (Japanese: ゆべし) is a type of wagashi (Japanese confection). It has several flavor and shape variations, most commonly walnuts or Japanese citrus (usually yuzu), and can be round or square, but all yubeshi has a base of sticky rice or rice flour, sugar and soy sauce. The process of production is very labor-intensive.[1] A circle is cut out of the top of the yuzu and set aside. A wooden spatula removes the fruit and scrapes away the white pith of the yuzu, leaving only the zest. The fruit is then stuffed with a filling which can range from plain mochiko flour to a traditional blend of mochiko, shōyu, and other spices. The reserved top of the fruit is placed back in as a cap, and the whole thing is steamed repeatedly until the fruit is shiny and brown and the mochi has fully gelatinized. The longer the product is stored, the harder the texture will become. Both the rind and filling are edible. Yubeshi can be served in many ways, whether sliced thin on top of rice dishes and salad, or softened in a warm soup dish.[2]
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Nara Prefecture in Alcohol

254.Sugidama
A sugidama (杉玉), or sakabayashi (酒林), is an object of Japanese origin made by shaping sugi (Cryptomeria) leaves into a ball. Green sugidama are hung from the eaves of sake breweries to indicate that new sake is ready.[1]
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Nara Prefecture in Confectionery

255.Kuzumochi
Kuzumochi (葛餅/久寿餅) is a Japanese term referring either to mochi cakes made of kuzuko (葛粉), starch derived from the root of the kuzu plant, or mochi cakes made from Lactobacillales-fermented wheat starch (久寿餅), a speciality dish local to certain wards of Tokyo, served chilled and topped with kuromitsu and kinako.
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256.Warabimochi
Warabimochi (蕨餅, warabi-mochi) is a wagashi (Japanese confection) made from warabiko (bracken starch) and covered or dipped in kinako (sweet toasted soybean flour).[1][2][3] Kuromitsu syrup is sometimes poured on top before serving as an added sweetener.[4] Warabimochi is a traditional Japanese dessert that is believed that its ancient origins dating back to the Heian period (794-1185) in Japan, and it was a popular delicacy among the aristocracy. It was one of the favorite treats of Emperor Daigo.[3] Hayashi Razan's "Heishin kikō (Travelogue of 1616) [...], which is considered to be the first travel diary to mention food on the road," highlighted Warabimochi as did other Tōkaidō travel guides in the 1600s.[5] The dessert became more widespread during the Edo period (1603-1868) when it was served in tea houses as part of the traditional Japanese tea ceremony.[6][7] It is now popular in the summertime, especially in the Kansai region and Okinawa, and it is often sold from trucks, similar to an ice cream truck in Western countries.[3]
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257.Sōmen
Sōmen (Japanese: 素麺), somyeon (Korean: 소면; 素麵), or sùmiàn (Chinese: 素麵) is a very thin noodle made of wheat flour, less than 1.3 mm in diameter. The noodles are used extensively in East Asian cuisines. Japanese sōmen is made by stretching the dough with vegetable oil, forming thin strands that are then air dried for later use. This is distinct from a similar thin noodle, hiyamugi, which is knife-cut.
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