was a stable of sumo wrestlers, part of the Tatsunami ichimon or group of stables. It was set up in 1980 by former à Âzeki Asahikuni, who branched off from Tatsunami stable. The head of Tatsunami stable opposed the setting up of the new stable, and did not speak to à Âshima until Asahifuji was promoted to à Âzeki in 1987. à Âshima produced ten sekitori, all of whom went on to reach the top makuuchi division.
à Âshima's senior wrestler in later years was the Mongolian-born veteran Kyokutenhà Â, who has Japanese citizenship and was seen as the successor to à Âshima. However, after Kyokutenhà  indicated a desire to continue wrestling, the stable instead closed on 25 April 2012 when à Âshima reached the mandatory retirement age of 65, with its wrestlers (including Kyokutenhà Â) transferring to Tomozuna stable. Kyokutenhà  took over Tomuzuna stable in 2017 and renamed it to à Âshima stable in 2022.
Most wrestlers' fighting names included the Chinese character "æÂÂ" meaning "sunrise", that can be read as either Asahi or Kyoku, taken from the founding stablemaster's shikona.
1980âÂÂ2012: 2nd à Âshima (former à Âzeki Asahikuni)
3-5-3 Ryà Âgoku, Sumida, Tokyo, 10 minute walk from Ryà Âgoku Station