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  1. Calendar. Japanese year converter. Reiwa Reiwa Heisei Showa Taisho Meiji. 2024 corresponds to Reiwa 6. It is the year of the Dragon. Reiwa 6 corresponds to the year 2024. It is the year of the Dragon. In 1873, the Gregorian calendar was introduced to Japan. While the Christian way of numbering years is commonly used in Japan today, a parallel ...

  2. The Nebuta Matsuri is one of the three great festivals of the Tohoku Region (Tohoku Sandai Matsuri) alongside Akita 's Kanto Matsuri and Sendai 's Tanabata. Local teams build the festival's two dozen floats, which are constructed of painted washi paper over a wire frame and take an entire year to design and construct.

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  3. Sanjusangendo (三十三間堂, Sanjūsangendō) is the popular name for Rengeo-in, a temple in eastern Kyoto which is famous for its 1001 statues of Kannon, the goddess of mercy. The temple was founded in 1164 and rebuilt a century later after the original structure had been destroyed in a fire.

  4. www.japan-guide.com › list › e1101Hokkaido Travel Guide

    Japan’s wild north island, a nature-lover’s paradise with world-class skiing. Prefectures: Hokkaido. Hokkaido (北海道, Hokkaidō) is the second largest, northernmost and least developed of Japan's four main islands.

  5. Meigetsuin Temple (明月院) is a temple of the Rinzai Zen Sect founded in 1160 in Kamakura. It is also known as Ajisaidera ("Hydrangea Temple") because hydrangeas bloom in abundance on the temple grounds during the rainy season around June. 95% of the hydrangeas here are of the Hime Ajisai ("Princess Hydrangea") variety, which are colored blue.

  6. Attractions. Get There. Mount Yoshino (吉野山, Yoshinoyama) in Yoshino Town, Nara Prefecture, is Japan's most famous cherry blossom spot. It features over 30,000 cherry trees planted around the slopes which visitors can admire as they walk along the roads that lead up the mountain.

  7. Japanese Greeting. In Japan, people greet each other by bowing. A bow can ranges from a small nod of the head to a deep bend at the waist. A deeper, longer bow indicates respect and conversely a small nod with the head is casual and informal. If the greeting takes place on tatami floor, people get on their knees to bow.

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