Behind the name of Tsumagoi Village, is a story of the love the legendary Prince Takeru Yamato had for his wife.
A long time ago, so the story goes, when Yamato was on his expedition in the eastern land, his wife, Princess Oto Tachibana, who had accompanied him, cast herself into the raging sea in order to appease the anger of the sea god Watatsumi. As Yamato returned from the campaign, he stopped at Usuhi no Saka (present-day Torii Touge Pass), where he mourned his wife. “Azumahaya!” exclaimed the grieving prince. Alas! My dear wife, how I miss you so. This is said to be the world’s first declaration of love by an aisaika.
This story of the husband who cried out for his departed wife became the inspiration for the village’s name, and people came to know it as the village of “tsumagoi,” a wordplay on “love for wife.” In 2006, the Japan Aisaika Organization declared Tsumagoi Village to be “the sacred ground of doting husbands.” Many aisaikas from Japan and abroad have since visited Tsumagoi, filling the village with their feelings and declaration of love.