Kunisaki Peninsula
nature
Kunisaki Peninsula
国東半島
Overview
The Kunisaki Peninsula is located in the northeastern part of Oita prefecture and is known for its lush forests, sparsely populated farmlands, and ancient religious culture.
The Kunisaki Peninsula extends into northeastern Oita, covered in forest and farmland shaped by a unique religious culture called Rokugo Manzan, which blended mountain worship, Shinto, and Buddhism from the Nara period onward. Temples, stone carvings, and sacred sites are scattered across the peninsula, including Futagoji Temple and the Kumano Magaibutsu cliff carvings, among the largest Buddhist stone reliefs in Japan. Mt. Futago, at 721 meters, was a site of ancient worship. The area moves slowly and rewards time, so traveling by car over two or more days is the best way to take it in without rushing through sites that feel genuinely apart from modern life.
Practical info
- Japanese name
- 国東半島
- Nearest station
- Beppu Station (50 min drive)
- Payment
- Cards accepted
- Reservations
- not required
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