Important Cultural Property

Emado Hall

Edo Period (13th year of Kansei Era, 1801)

The Emado Hall is a hip-and-gable building with a sangawarabuki pantile roof located at the eastern edge of the Kannondo Hall near a steep cliff.
It features a simple open structure with eight exposed pillars to accommodate the numerous votive (ema) tablets offered due to its status as a Kannon pilgrimage site.
In the early modern period, it also served as a tea house, providing hospitality to worshippers.
The hall is open on all sides and has a stone stove in the center, with numerous votive tablets hanging on the tie beam.
Since the early Meiji era (1868–1912)​, it has been a rest area for pilgrims, where tea is served alongside Miidera’s specialty, Benkei Chikara Mochi sweets.
Chikara-ken, the stall selling the mochi originally operated at Emado Hall, was relocated along the approach to Kannon-do Hall from Bimyo-ji when the Emado Hall was designated a cultural property, continuing to deliver the unchanged taste of this famed specialty.

Important Cultural Property

Edo Period (13th year of Kansei Era, 1801)

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