Three rail lines converge at Kizu Station — the Nara Line, the Gakken Toshi Line, the Kansai Main Line — and the platforms carry a particular kind of weekday quiet, people moving between Kyoto, Osaka, and Nara without quite stopping. Kizugawa sits at this junction, close enough to Nara to feel its gravity, yet shaped by its own layered past: the ruins of Kuni-kyō, an eighth-century imperial capital that lasted only a few years before the court moved on, leaving the fields to close over it.
The Yamashiro Kyodo Shiryokan holds some of what remains — bronze dotaku bells, mirrors from the Kofun period, the accumulated archaeology of a land that has been inhabited and abandoned and reinhabited across centuries. Outside the museum, the present reasserts itself in the form of tea fields. Fukujuen, whose Iyemon brand is familiar across Japan, has roots in this region, and the cultivation of tea, along with takenoko and kujō-negi, still anchors the agricultural rhythm of the lower ground. Kizugawa-zushi — pressed mackerel sushi — belongs to the same river-and-road economy that once moved goods between the old capitals.
The newer districts — Suimidai, Umemidai — have their own tempo, built out from the Kansai Science City development, full of young families and shopping centers. Sagara-momen, a locally woven cotton textile, is the older thread running through all of this, a craft that predates the expressways and the supermarkets, still present if you know where to look.
Stay in Kizugawa, Kyoto
What converges here
- Joruri-ji Three-Story Pagoda (Kukutai-ji Three-Story Pagoda)
- Joruri-ji Temple Main Hall (Kukutai-ji Main Hall)
- Kaijusan-ji Five-Story Pagoda
- Kuni Palace Site (Yamashiro Kokubunji Site)
- Joruri-ji Temple Garden
- Narayama Tile Kiln Site, Utahime Tile Kiln Site, Onyogadani Tile Kiln Site, Ichisaka Tile Kiln Site, Umetani Tile Kiln Site, Kaseyama Tile Kiln Site, Nakayama Tile Kiln Site
- Tsubai Otsukayama Tumulus
- Shinoji-dera Temple Ruins
- Kōma-ji Temple Ruins
- Kaijusan-ji Monju-do
- Gorinto (Five-Ringed Stone Pagoda)
- Gorinto (Five-Ringed Stone Pagoda)
- Gorinto (Five-Storied Stone Stupa)
- Jusan-juto (Thirteen-Story Pagoda)
- Tenjinsha Thirteen-Story Pagoda
- Iwafune-ji Temple Five-Story Stone Pagoda
- Iwafune-ji Thirteen-Story Pagoda
- Iwafune-ji Stone Chamber
- Goryo Shrine Main Hall
- Senkyo-ji Gorinto
- Sagara Shrine Main Hall
- Gansho-ji Three-Story Pagoda
- Hakusan Shrine Main Hall
- Jindoji Main Hall
- Matsuo Shrine Main Hall
- Kobayashi Family Residence (Yamashiro-cho, Soraku-gun, Kyoto)
- Kizu
- Kamo
- Kizugawadai
- Tanakura
- Nishi-Kizu
- Kamikoma
- Kizu
- Kizu