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Takeaways from AP’s report on Japan’s most sacred shrine, rebuilt every 20 years for a millennium

ISE, Japan (AP) 鈥 Every two decades for the last 1,300 years, Ise Jingu, Japan鈥檚 most revered Shinto shrine, has been knocked down and rebuilt from scratch.

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Takeaways from AP's report on Japan's most sacred shrine, rebuilt every 20 years for a millennium

Shinto priests march into the main palace of Toyoukedaijingu, also known as Geku, or the outer sanctuary, of the Ise Jingu shrine complex as they begin Yamaguchisai, a kickoff ceremony of Shikinen Sengu, concluding in 2033, in Ise, central Japan, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)


ISE, Japan (AP) 鈥 Every two decades for the last 1,300 years, Ise Jingu, Japan鈥檚 most revered Shinto shrine, has been knocked down and rebuilt from scratch.

The massive, $390 million demolition and construction job takes about nine years. It requires the country鈥檚 finest carpenters, woodcutters, builders and artisans to pour their hearts into the smallest details of structures that are doomed from the moment the work begins.

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