The brick walls of the old silk-reeling factory still stand along the edge of town, their proportions unchanged since the Meiji government raised them as a statement of industrial ambition. Tomioka Silk Mill became a UNESCO World Heritage Site, but on a weekday the grounds carry a quieter weight — the smell of old timber, the scale of the wooden-framed filature halls, the sense that the machines once ran here in continuous noise and steam. Silk production and sericulture shaped this town's economy and its identity, and bolts of silk cloth remain among the things Tomioka is known for.
Away from the mill, the town opens into hilly terrain threaded by the Kabura River and its tributaries. At the western edge, the rock formations of Myogi-san rise in jagged silhouette — a landscape designated among Japan's noted scenic places, and the site of Myogi Shrine, whose Edo-period structures sit against the mountain's base. Across town, Nukisaki Shrine at Ichinomiya holds its own Edo-era halls and carries the status of the principal shrine of former Kozuke Province. The Gunma Museum of Natural History displays dinosaur fossils and deep-time geology, a different kind of deep history sitting quietly alongside the silk legacy.
What persists is the layering: Yayoi-period pit dwellings excavated at Nakatakasei Kannozan, medieval shrine customs, Meiji industrial architecture, and the mountain's older presence. Tomioka doesn't resolve these into a single story. They simply coexist, each legible on its own terms.
Stay in Tomioka, Gunma
What converges here
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Nakatakase Kannonyama Site
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Myogisan
- Myogi Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Nukisaki Shrine
- Nukisaki Shrine
- Nukisaki Jinja Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Former Motegi Family Residence (formerly Kannouhara, Tomioka, Gunma)
- Myogi Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Myogi Shrine
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Former Tomioka Silk Mill
- Kyu Tomioka Seishijo (Former Tomioka Silk Mill)
- Myogi-Arafune-Saku Kogen
- Joshu-Tomioka
- Joshu-Nanokamachi
- Higashi-Tomioka
- Joshu-Ichinomiya
- Nishi-Tomioka
- Nanjai
- Kannohara
- Senbira