Yamaga, Kumamoto
Paper lanterns made without a single piece of metal — only washi paper and glue, shaped into elaborate forms worn on the heads of women dancers. That craft, known as Yamaga tōrō, defines much of what Yamaga holds together: the August festival at Ōmiya Shrine, the artisans at the Yamaga Tōrō Mingei-kan demonstrating folds and cuts in a quiet workroom, the slow accumulation of a technique revived in the Meiji period and still practiced here.
The town sits in a basin where the Kikuchi River flattens the land southward, with Kunimiyama and the ranges of the Kyushu mountains rising to the north. Sakura-yu, a timber bathhouse reconstructed in 2012, anchors the old hot-spring quarter — the kind of public bath that Hosokawa Tadatoshi once frequented, now open to anyone who walks in off the street. Nearby, Yachiyoza, a kabuki theater built in 1910 and designated an Important Cultural Property, still holds performances; its wooden interior smells of age and cedar. Around the market stalls, Yamaga walnuts and Kita-chiku tea appear alongside the sharper novelty of Yamaga Yakushi Uma curry.
Older layers surface further out. The Kumamoto Prefectural Museum of Decorative Tumuli sits beside the Iwahara burial mounds, where visitors can try making magatama beads. Kikuchi Castle, a seventh-century mountain fortification, has been partially reconstructed as a history park. These sites do not compete with each other; they simply coexist, spread across a landscape that has been inhabited, fortified, and farmed for a very long time.