| Principais Links | PROVÍNCIA
DE HIROSHIMA |
|
The
Peace Memorial Park was built to commemorate the dropping of the atomic
bomb over Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 and to promote a peaceful world.
It is located in the area around the atomic explosion's epicenter, and
houses the Peace Memorial Museum and many other a-bomb related monuments.The
Peace Memorial Museum graphically displays the atomic bomb's horrible
effects on the city and its inhabitants. A visit is naturally depressing.
In the museum's east building, Hiroshima's militarist past and the process
leading to the dropping of the bomb are documented. Audio guides are available
in more than a dozen languages. |
![]() |
![]()
|
The Atomic
Bomb Dome is one of the few buildings around the explosion's epicenter
that partially survived the blast, and the city's only remaining bomb
damaged building. The former Industrial Promotion Hall is now an UNESCO
World Heritage Site. Between the museum and the Atomic Bomb Dome stands
the Memorial Cenotaph for Atomic Bomb Victims. It contains a list of all
the people who were killed by the explosion or died due to the bombing's
long-term effects such as cancer caused by radiation. The Statue of the
A-Bomb Children and the Cenotaph for Korean Victims are some of many more
monuments found in the park. |
![]() |
Miyajima (literally "shrine island")
has been celebrated as a sacred island and one of Japan's three most scenic
views. It is most famous for Itsukushima Shrine, which, together with
its large wooden torii (gate), stands in the ocean during high tide.
Deer move around the island freely, and so do monkeys on top of Misen, the island's highest mountain. The island becomes very romantic in the
evening when the tourist crowds return to the mainland and only the visitors
who stay overnight stroll the calm streets in their yukata and geta, enjoying
the sight of the illuminated shrine. |
|
|
Miyajima Itsukushima Shrine
|
||