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Photos show historic Japanese shrine that is torn down and rebuilt every 20 years

ISE, Japan (AP) — Ise Jingu is Japan’s most revered Shinto shrine, which every 20 years is completely knocked down and rebuilt in an expensive, time-consuming process that has endured for the last 1,300 years.

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Photos show historic Japanese shrine that is torn down and rebuilt every 20 years

Members of the Shinto priesthood try to push down a sacred timber from a wheeled platform at the end of Mihishirogi Hoeishiki, a ceremony of the Shikinen Sengu ritual to rebuild the shrine’s main structures for Shinto deities, at the Ise Jingu shrine complex, in Ise, central Japan, Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)


ISE, Japan (AP) — Ise Jingu is Japan’s most revered Shinto shrine, which every 20 years is completely knocked down and rebuilt in an expensive, time-consuming process that has endured for the last 1,300 years.

The last operation to replace the 125 shrine buildings was completed in 2013, and this year marks the beginning of , which is being documented by journalists for The Associated Press.

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