Noh Stage of Homma Family Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Loneliness not just the quietness of the off-season
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I have been to Sado every year for more than 30 years, but I stopped by for the first time. It's not well maintained as a tourist destination, but I think it's difficult because it costs money to maintain it. The Nohgaku no Sato opposite seems to have become another facility now and it seems that it is not a tourist facility. When I rented a milk workshop under the eaves and spent the night, Nohgaku no Sato was under construction. It's a place that makes me feel the flow of time.
Roadside Station Opposite Performing Arts and Toki no Sato. It was a mansion that felt a little rough when entering from the gate, but the mansion of the Honma family of the Sado Hosei school family, which was originally the family of the castle owner, was said to have been. It was rebuilt in 1897 and still seems to be an active Noh stage.
In Sado, it seems that the traditional Japanese performing arts called Noh were enjoyed by ordinary farmers, not high-ranking people, and there are many Noh stages in Sado. Since Noh was a performing art dedicated to God, it is said that the pine tree that God always dwells on the stage. The Honma family Noh stage is a stage that a private house has. It was said that it was not open to the public, but although the stage had a shutter, the door was open and I was able to enter the site. The family name between the columns ...
Roadside Station It is just across from the performing arts and Toki no Sato. It is a full-fledged acoustic turtle buried under the floor, and it seems that it is rare in Japan as a privately owned Noh stage, but the tendo was closed and I couldn't see the inside.
It is a Noh stage that Emperor Showa and former Prime Minister Nakasone also visited. It is not a particularly large Noh stage. It's a pity that the shutters are usually closed and you can't see the inside.
Loneliness not just the quietness of the off-season
I have been to Sado every year for more than 30 years, but I stopped by for the first time. It's not well maintained as a tourist destination, but I think it's difficult because it costs money to maintain it. The Nohgaku no Sato opposite seems to have become another facility now and it seems that it is not a tourist facility. When I rented a milk workshop under the eaves and spent the night, Nohgaku no Sato was under construction. It's a place that makes me feel the flow of time.
it seems to be an active Noh stage.
Roadside Station Opposite Performing Arts and Toki no Sato. It was a mansion that felt a little rough when entering from the gate, but the mansion of the Honma family of the Sado Hosei school family, which was originally the family of the castle owner, was said to have been. It was rebuilt in 1897 and still seems to be an active Noh stage.
The private stage of the master
In Sado, it seems that the traditional Japanese performing arts called Noh were enjoyed by ordinary farmers, not high-ranking people, and there are many Noh stages in Sado. Since Noh was a performing art dedicated to God, it is said that the pine tree that God always dwells on the stage. The Honma family Noh stage is a stage that a private house has. It was said that it was not open to the public, but although the stage had a shutter, the door was open and I was able to enter the site. The family name between the columns ...
Benji Home Stadium
Roadside Station It is just across from the performing arts and Toki no Sato. It is a full-fledged acoustic turtle buried under the floor, and it seems that it is rare in Japan as a privately owned Noh stage, but the tendo was closed and I couldn't see the inside.
It is a historical Noh stage.
It is a Noh stage that Emperor Showa and former Prime Minister Nakasone also visited. It is not a particularly large Noh stage. It's a pity that the shutters are usually closed and you can't see the inside.