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Himeshima, Oita

municipality

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Oita / Himeshima
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A reading of this place

The ferry crossing from the Kunisaki coast takes roughly twenty minutes, and by the time Himeshima's silhouette sharpens against the water, the island has already begun to feel like a different proposition. This is a volcanic island — the only one of its kind in the Seto Inland Sea — shaped across hundreds of thousands of years by seven eruptions, and the geology is not merely background. At Kanzanzaki, a cliff face of black obsidian rises forty meters above the sea, raw and unadorned, a national natural monument that the island has been quietly exporting since the Jōmon period, when the stone moved through trade networks reaching far beyond Suō-nada.

The obsidian still anchors the island's identity. The Toki to Shizen no Kiseki Geopark Ten'ichikonai, opened in 2017, holds geological and archaeological material including Naumann elephant fossils alongside obsidian specimens, placing the stone in a deeper timeline. Offshore, a small sandbar called Ukisu carries a shrine to the god of fishing; the Himeshima Lighthouse, a three-story stone structure completed in 1904, stands at the island's edge. The festivals — the Himeshima Bon Odori, the karei flounder festival, the kuruma ebi prawn festival — mark a calendar shaped by the sea. Kuruma ebi farming and fishing out of the ports of Higashiura and Nishiura remain the daily work. The shrine of Himegoso-sha, dedicated to the deity from whom the island takes its name, holds its spring festival each April. The island persists on its own terms.

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Islands of this municipality

The islands of Himeshima, Oita

Inside this place

What converges here

Cultural Properties 2
  • Setonaikai Himeshima Fishing Village Landscape Important Cultural Landscape
  • Himeshima Obsidian Deposit Natural Monument
Natural Parks 1
  • Setonaikai National Park
Fishing Ports 2
  • Higashiura Fishing Port
  • Nishiura Fishing Port
Cultural Properties Natural Parks Fishing Ports