The castle keeps watch from the bluff above the Kiso River, stone walls rising over the point where the water breaks free of the mountains and spreads into the Nōbi Plain. Inuyama's position here — at the northern edge of Aichi, where geography itself changes register — gives the town its particular tension: compressed history on one side, open flatland on the other. The castle, a National Treasure, draws the eye from almost anywhere in the lower streets, but the streets themselves are what hold the texture.
Along the old castle-town lanes, vendors press five-hei-mochi over charcoal, the sweet-salty smell of miso paste catching in the air before you see the stall. Inuyama-yaki pottery turns up in shop windows — quieter work than its fame might suggest. At Ōagata Shrine, one of the two senior shrines of the old Owari province, the grounds carry a different weight from the tourist circuit; the Hōnen Festival gives the place its more complex reputation. A short walk brings you to Urakuen, a garden where the National Treasure tea room Jo-an stands among older structures, owned and maintained by a railway company — an arrangement that says something about how this town holds its past.
The Kiso River runs through all of it. The cormorant fishing, ukai, still takes place on the water in summer evenings, torchlight over the current. Inuyama Matsuri sends elaborately mechanized floats — karakuri ningyō puppets worked from inside — through the castle-town streets. The Meiji Mura open-air museum and Little World sit nearby, each a different kind of collection, each pulling a different kind of visitor. What remains, underneath all of it, is the river and the bluff, the geography that made this place worth contesting in the first place.
Stay in Inuyama, Aichi
What converges here
- Inuyama Castle Tower
- Joan
- Higashinomiya Tumulus
- Inuyama Castle Ruins
- Aozuka Tumulus
- Kyu Shoden-in Shoin
- Ogata Shrine
- Ogata Shrine
- Former Mie Prefectural Office Building
- Former Ise Post Office Building (Ujiyamada Post Office Building)
- Former Gofukuza Theater
- Former Shinagawa Lighthouse
- Former Yamanashi Prefecture Higashi-Yamanashi District Office
- Former Japan Holy Catholic Church Kyoto St. John's Church Hall
- Former Sapporo Telephone Exchange Building
- Former Higashimatsu Family Residence (formerly Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture)
- Former Sugashima Lighthouse Attached Official Residence
- Former Sugashima Lighthouse Attached Official Residence
- Former Saigo Tsugumichi Residence (formerly located in Kamimeguro, Meguro, Tokyo)
- Former Saionji Family Okitsu Villa (Zaigyo-so)
- Former Saionji Family Okitsu Villa (Zaigyo-so)
- Former Saionji Family Okitsu Villa (Zaigyo-so)
- Hida-Kisogawa
- Aichi Kogen
- Inuyama Onsen
- Inuyama
- Haguro
- Rakuda
- Inuyamaguchi
- Zenshino
- Inuyama-Yuen
- Tomiokamai
- Inuyama
- Inuyama