Tomika, Gifu
The Nagara River Railway stops at Tomika, and the platform feels small in the way that farming towns often do — a single line, a quiet road, the hills beginning almost immediately. The town sits at the northern edge of the Nōbi Plain, where the flatland gives way to forested ridges, and the sense of transition is physical: you can feel the plain ending here.
What accumulates in Tomika is time, layered in an unusual way. The oldest household registry in Japan, the Hanpuri Koseki, was recorded here in the ancient period, and the town has not let that fact drift into abstraction. The Fukatsu Town Local History Museum holds reproductions of the document alongside excavated objects, while Matsui-ya Shuzōjō — a sake brewery founded in the late Edo period — still produces a label named after the registry itself. The black rice and red rice grown locally, varieties marketed as ancient grains, connect the same thread: agriculture here carries a longer memory than most.
The medieval layer sits just above. Kajita Castle once commanded views across the plain from its hilltop position, and the temple Ryūfuku-ji, founded in the late Sengoku period, serves as the ancestral temple of the castle lords. At the roadside station Michinoeki Hanpuri-no-Sato Tomika, the building's design references the ancient Asuka aesthetic, and the shelves carry black rice sweets, hooba-zushi, and Dōjō Hachiya persimmons — produce that reads as both local habit and deliberate continuity.
What converges here
- 夕田墳墓群