Tono, Iwate
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Tono Festival
Tono is a town in the mountains of Iwate Prefecture that seems to remember things other pl…
Tono is a town in the mountains of Iwate Prefecture that seems to remember things other places have forgotten. It was here that folklorist Kunio Yanagita gathered the stories that became Tono Monogatari — 119 accounts of kappa, ancestral spirits, disappearances, and the permeable boundary between the living world and whatever lies beyond it. The book, published in 1910, is still in print. The stories still feel close.
Each September, the town holds its annual festival across the city center and the grounds of Tono-go Hachimangu Shrine. More than sixty folk performing arts groups take part — deer dances, Nanbu kagura, rice-planting dances, sword dances. These are not reconstructions. They are the actual forms that farming communities developed over centuries to communicate with their gods, performed by people who learned them from the generation before.
Some groups welcome visitors to join in. The line between audience and participant, like so much in Tono, is softer than you'd expect.
The basin opens slowly, mountains pressing in on all sides, the Kitakami highlands folding the town into a kind of interior quiet. Tono sits at the heart of this enclosure, a former castle town whose streets carry the layered weight of the Nanbu clan's long tenure and the folklore Yanagita Kunio collected here in the early twentieth century. That collection — *Tono Monogatari* — gave the kappa and the zashiki-warashi a textual permanence that the town has never quite shaken off, nor tried to.
The Tono City Museum holds the folklore materials and ethnographic records, a place where the gap between document and living tradition feels narrow. Nearby, the earthen forms of Nabekura Castle Park mark where the castle once stood. In the foothills, the stone figures of the Gohyaku Rakan — carved during the Tenmei period of the Edo era — sit in rows, worn and mossy, facing no particular direction. Hayachine Shrine occupies the mountain above, a site of mountain worship tied to Hayachine itself.
At ground level, the town produces hops — harvested each autumn at the Tono Hop Festival — and the lamb dish jingisukan appears on local menus, served in the bucket style particular to this area. Nagaoka Onsen offers a bath without ceremony or crowd. The rhythm here is agricultural and unhurried, shaped more by the farming calendar and the weight of old stories than by any tourist itinerary.
What converges here
- Tono: Arakawa Highland Ranch and Tsuchibuchi Yamaguchi Settlement
- Ayaori Shinden Site
- Nabekura Castle Ruins
- Former Kikuchi Residence (formerly located in Otomo-cho, Tono City, Iwate Prefecture)
- Former Chiba Family Residence (Ayaori-cho, Tono City, Iwate Prefecture)
- Former Chiba Family Residence (Ayaori-cho, Tono, Iwate)
- Former Chiba Family Residence (Ayaoricho, Tono, Iwate)
- Former Chiba Family Residence (Ayaori-cho, Tono City, Iwate Prefecture)
- Former Chiba Family Residence (Ayaori-cho, Tono, Iwate)
- Hayachine
- Nagaoka Onsen
- Mount Yakushi
- Mount Rokkoshi
- Tono
- Miyamori
- Iwate-Kamigo
- Iwate-Futsukamachi
- Iwanehashi
- Hirakura
- Kashiwagidaira
- Ayaori
- Arayamae
- Ashigase
- Aozasa
- Masuzawa