Minamisoma, Fukushima
1 upcoming event
Soma Nomaoi — The Wild Horse Chase
The origin story is a thousand years old: Taira no Masakado, the warlord, released wild ho…
The origin story is a thousand years old: Taira no Masakado, the warlord, released wild horses on the plains of what is now Chiba and trained his soldiers to chase them down. The ritual migrated north, took root in the coastal region of Fukushima, and has been performed there ever since — through wars, through disasters, through everything the twentieth century brought to Japan's northeast.
Soma Nomaoi takes place across three days and multiple venues in Minamisoma and Soma. The centerpiece is the mounted procession and cavalry race at Hibaragahara, where around four hundred warriors in full armor — lacquered helmets, ancestral banners streaming behind them — ride at speed across the open ground. On the final day, the oldest rite: white-robed men chase a released horse into the grounds of Soma Kodate Shrine and capture it with their bare hands, offering it to the gods.
This is the Hamadori coast of Fukushima. The same landscape that absorbed the earthquake, the tsunami, the meltdown of 2011. The festival did not stop. That, too, is part of what it means.
Horses move through Minamisoma in ways that feel structural, not ceremonial — the Soma Nomaoi festival, designated as an important intangible folk cultural property, organizes the year around mounted warriors, field chases, and the Nomakake ritual at Soma Ota Shrine, where the Soma clan's tutelary deity has been venerated since the era of the Nakamura domain. The festival is not a reconstruction but a continuation, and the distinction shows in how the town holds itself.
Along the coast, the Pacific runs flat against beaches where surfers gather at Kitaizumi, and the rivers — the Mano and the Shinta — cut through land that still carries the weight of 2011. The Izumi no Hitohama Matsu, a black pine of over four centuries, survived the tsunami and salt damage and stands as a quiet, physical fact rather than a metaphor anyone needs to explain. A scale-model memorial of the Haramachi Wireless Tower — once among the tallest structures in Asia — occupies a corner of the city, marking what was here before.
Inside the former unmanned station at Odaka, a brewery now operates — the first of its kind in Japan to occupy a station building — and the Asahiza, a theater that opened in 1923 and remains a registered tangible cultural property, still holds its original proportions. Koritenmaru, the local confection, and Soma Nagareyama, a regional performing art, persist alongside a growing robotics testing industry that uses the open coastal terrain for development work. The texture of Minamisoma is not resolved; it holds several timelines simultaneously, and none of them has finished yet.
What converges here
- Sakurai Tumulus
- Yokoodai Iron Production Site
- Izumi Kanga Site
- Urajiri Shell Mound
- Mano Kofun Cluster
- Hayama Yokoana Cave Tombs
- Yakushido Sekibutsu (Attached: Amidado Sekibutsu)
- Kannondo Stone Buddhas
- Former Takeyama Family Residence (Kitahara, Haramachi, Fukushima)
- Haranomachi
- Odaka
- Momonai
- Iwaki-Ota
- Kashima
- Manogawa Fishing Port
- Shibusa Fishing Port