Nagasaki, Nagasaki
1 upcoming event
Nagasaki Kunchi
Every October, a dragon descends the stone steps of Suwa Shrine and moves through the stre…
Every October, a dragon descends the stone steps of Suwa Shrine and moves through the streets of Nagasaki. It has been doing this for four hundred years. The dragon dances came from the Chinese settlement that once occupied the northern quarter of the city. The Portuguese galleons came too — rebuilt each year in timber and lacquer, carried through the crowd on the shoulders of dozens of men, their rigging swaying above the cobblestones. Nagasaki Kunchi is not a reenactment. It is something stranger than that: a city remembering, year after year, that it was never quite like the rest of Japan. The performers are locals — fishermen, merchants, the families who have held these roles for generations. The audience lines the streets and fills the bleachers. And somewhere between the dragon and the galleon, between the shrine and the harbor, you begin to feel it too. You are in Japan. But you are also, unmistakably, in Nagasaki.
Steep hills crowd the harbor on three sides, and the streets climb in switchbacks past wooden houses, stone walls, and the occasional church spire. Nagasaki sits at the bottom of this compressed geography, its port open to the southwest, the rest of the city folded into ridges. The sense of compression is physical — trams run through narrow corridors, and the older neighborhoods stack themselves vertically in ways that most Japanese cities never had to manage.
The layering of cultures here is not decorative. At the 長崎新地中華街, the architecture and the food carry genuine weight — ちゃんぽん arrived through the port, not through a marketing campaign. べっ甲工芸, the tortoiseshell craft that developed during the trading-port era, is still practiced and sold at the 長崎市べっ甲工芸館, housed in a converted former customs building. カステラ sits in shop windows along the main streets, its Portuguese lineage still legible in the name. The 崇福寺 complex, with its 第一峰門 and 大雄宝殿, belongs to a Chinese Buddhist tradition that took root here during the Edo period, when Nagasaki was the only port open to the outside world.
The 出島 site, now partly reconstructed, marks where that singular openness was both permitted and confined. Nearby, the 山王神社 stands with its one surviving torii pillar, the others lost to the atomic blast. These two sites sit within walking distance of each other — the history of enforced isolation and the history of sudden, catastrophic violence occupying the same city grid, neither canceling the other out.
What converges here
- Sites of Japan's Meiji Industrial Revolution: Iron and Steel, Shipbuilding and Coal Mining
- Hidden Christian Sites in the Nagasaki Region and Amakusa
- Sofuku-ji Daiyuhoden
- Sofukuji Daiichihomon (First Peak Gate)
- Oura Cathedral
- Nagasaki Minamiyamate Preservation District
- Nagasaki Higashiyamate Historic District
- Siebold Residence Site
- Dejima Dutch Trading Post Site
- Oura Cathedral Precincts
- Kosuge Shipyard Ruins
- Magaizaki Tumulus Group
- Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Site
- Nagasaki Daiba Sites (Uominodake Daiba, Shirogashima Daiba, Megami Daiba)
- Takashima Coal Mine Ruins (Takashima Hokkeii Pit Ruins, Nakanoshima Coal Mine Ruins, Hashima Coal Mine Ruins)
- Takashima Shuhan Former Residence
- Giant Eel Habitat
- Northern Limit Habitat of Kiire Tsuchitorimochi
- Megane-bashi (Spectacles Bridge)
- Sofuku-ji Maso-mon Gate
- Sofuku-ji Gohodo (Kantei-do or Kannon-do)
- Sofuku-ji Bell and Drum Tower
- Former Tojin Yashiki Gate
- Former Honda Residence (Nakazato-machi, Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture)
- Kiyomizu-dera Main Hall
- Shofukuji Temple
- Shofuku-ji Temple
- Shofuku-ji Temple
- Shofuku-ji
- Sofuku-ji Temple Sanmon (Romon)
- Former Alt Residence (Nagasaki, Minamiyamate-machi)
- Former Alt Residence (Nagasaki, Minamiyamate-machi)
- Former Alt Residence (Minamiyamate-machi, Nagasaki)
- Former Glover Residence (Minamiyamate-machi, Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture)
- Former Glover Residence (Minamiyamate-machi, Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture)
- Shitsu Church
- Ono Church
- Former Ringer Residence
- Former Shitsu Relief Institution
- Former Shitsu Relief Institution
- Former Shitsu Relief Institution
- Former Latin Seminary
- Former Nagasaki Customs Kudarimatsu Branch Office
- Former British Consulate in Nagasaki
- Former British Consulate in Nagasaki
- Former British Consulate in Nagasaki
- Former Hongkong and Shanghai Bank Nagasaki Branch
- Honkochi Water Source Waterworks Facilities
- Honkochi Suigenchi Waterworks Facilities
- Honkochi Suigenchi Waterworks Facilities
- Higashiyamате No. 12 Building (Higashiyamate Juuniban-kan)
- Higashiyamате No. 12 Building
- Kofuku-ji Temple Main Hall (Daio Hoden)
- Peace Park
- Inasayama Onsen
- Nagasaki Onsen
- Mount Hachiro
- Mount Nagaura
- Nagasaki
- Nagasaki
- Nagasaki-ekimae
- Shinchi-Chukagai
- Urakami
- Shiyakusho
- Akasako
- Heiwa-Koen
- Shindaikumachi
- Moririmachi
- Nagasaki-Daigaku
- Chitosemachi
- Genbaku-Shiryokan
- Hamamachi-Arcade
- Urakami-Ekimae
- Sumiyoshi
- Daigaku-Byoin
- Iwayabashi
- Kanko-dori
- Hotarujaya
- Shin-Nakagawamachi
- Suwa-Jinja
- Dejima
- Ohato
- Nishi-Urakami
- Takaramachi
- Ishibashi
- Wakabamachi
- Oura-Tenshudo
- Urakami-Shako
- Shianbashi
- Utsutugawa
- Gotomachi
- Nishihamacho
- Ohashi
- Sakuramachi
- Sofukuji
- Megane-bashi
- Zenzamachi
- Hizen-Koga
- Yachiyo-machi
- Oura-Kaigandori
- Showa-machi-dori
- Medical Center
- Sumiyoshi
- Shiyakusho
- Shinchi-Chukagai
- Nishihamacho
- Nagasaki-Ekimae
- Nomo Fishing Port
- Shikimi Fishing Port
- Kabashima Fishing Port
- Shitsu Fishing Port
- Haebaru Fishing Port
- Toishi Fishing Port
- Tekuma Fishing Port
- Fukabori Fishing Port
- Tameishi Fishing Port
- Aikawa Fishing Port
- Aiba Fishing Port
- Kayake Fishing Port
- Nonogushi Fishing Port