Mysterious "mise-zukuri" townscape/Walk around the island village Sea World Pacific Ocean Teba Island Part2 (Tokushima Prefecture)
This is a sequel to Tebajima. Tebajima is located within the Muroto Anan Quasi-National Park, approximately 3.7 km south of Mugi Port, and 15 minutes by sea by regular boat. From the lighthouse observation deck in the southern part of the island, you can see the Pacific Ocean to the south, Oshima and Tsushima, the meccas of rock fishing, to the east, and Cape Muroto to the west.It is an island of eternal spring where pea flowers bloom in the middle of winter. In the old days, it was also called ``Tenami'' and ``Ideha.'' It is said to have been opened in 1800 by people who immigrated from the Mugi area on the Shikoku mainland with the encouragement of the Tokushima clan. In modern times, the area prospered as a major producer of bonito fishing and bonito flakes, and had a population of nearly 1,000 in the early Showa period. Currently, it is an island with a tropical atmosphere, with hibiscus scents and three promenade routes, and the main industry is fishing, mainly pole-and-line fishing. There is a monument to Ujo Noguchi's poem at the ferry terminal, and Oike is home to the ``Dewajima Oike Shiratamamo'' (a nationally designated natural monument), which can only be found in four places on earth. In recent years, exhibitions of sculptures, quilts, and paintings, as well as modern art, have been held to revitalize the island. In 2017, the townscape, lined with main buildings of fishing houses of all sizes and styles, was highly praised and was selected as a nationally important traditional building preservation district (judenken). (See “Shimadasu”)
With the start of full-scale migration in the late Edo period, a village was formed around a port that used an inlet in the northern part of the island. The traditional main building from the end of the Edo period to the early Showa period remains well, and together with the historical land allocation that shows the changes in the expansion of the village, it conveys the atmosphere of a traditional fishing village on a remote island. The shape of the old folk house is characterized by the structure of the opening called ``bucho-zukuri.'' It is a Hashirama device where two wooden doors, Uwamise and Shitamise, are put together to become shutters when it rains, and when the weather is nice, the Shitamise is lowered to become a store, and it is a community device where you can display items and sit and chat. There is also. The biggest attraction of this island is that it has not been harmed by motorization, that is, there are no cars. Neither the village nor the buildings have been modified to accommodate automobiles, and the area remains as it was in the walking days.
集落町並みWalker
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Database 出羽島
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