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Oita, Oita

municipality

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Oita / Oita
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Festival

Funai Senshi: Oita's Night of Warrior Floats

Oita was once called Funai, and the city carries this history with ease. The Funai Senshi…

·First Saturday of August, evening. Giant floats depicting Sengoku-era warlords up to 10 meters tall parade through central Oita City. ·Chuo-dori, Oita City, Oita
More in Oita
A reading of this place

The fishing boats out of Saganoseki bring in aji and saba that carry a particular reputation — sold under the names 関あじ and 関さば, caught by a method that keeps the fish alive until landing. At the market stalls and izakayas near the waterfront, the flesh arrives firm and cold, with little ceremony. This is Oita city, the prefectural capital, sitting at the head of Beppu Bay where the Oita and Ono rivers have built their quiet delta over centuries.

The city's layers don't announce themselves. The 大友氏遺跡, designated a national historic site, marks where the warlord Otomo Sorin once ruled a domain that became one of the earliest centers of Christian mission in Japan, absorbing what was then called Nanban culture. A few streets away, the 大分銀行赤レンガ館 stands in red brick, a registered tangible cultural property from a later era of Western-inflected architecture. And then, at the bay's edge, the stacks and tanks of the industrial waterfront — steel, chemicals, petroleum — built up rapidly from the mid-twentieth century, reshaping the shoreline into something altogether harder.

The 大分七夕まつり and the 府内戦紙 — a festival reenacting the battles of the Otomo clan — mark the city's calendar with noise and color each summer. High on the hill above the bay, 高崎山 is home to a large colony of Japanese macaques, visible from paths that also open onto the water below. The city doesn't resolve into a single identity; it holds the fishing culture, the industrial scale, and the old castle-town history in an unresolved, lived-in proximity.

Stay in Oita, Oita

MATSURI Festivals & Events
Inside this place

What converges here

Cultural Properties 23
  • Chiyomaru Tumulus Historic Site
  • Furumiya Tumulus Historic Site
  • Oita Motomachi Stone Buddhas Historic Site
  • Otomo Clan Ruins Historic Site
  • Yokoo Shell Mound Historic Site
  • Tsukiyama Tumulus Historic Site
  • Bungo Kokubunji Temple Site Historic Site
  • Sato Kanga Ruins Historic Site
  • Takase Stone Buddha Historic Site
  • Camphor Tree of Yusuhara Hachimangu Natural Monument
  • Takasaki-yama Monkey Habitat Natural Monument
  • Goto Residence (Natsuhara-cho, Oita-gun, Oita) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yugawara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yugawara Hachiman-gū Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yugawara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Yusuhara Hachimangu Shrine Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Kurogahama and Bishago Rock Registered Monument
Natural Parks 3
  • Aso-Kuju National Park
  • Setonaikai National Park
  • Nippo Kaigan Quasi-National Park
Stations 19
  • Oita 日豊線
  • Ozai 日豊線
  • Tsurusaki 日豊線
  • Taki 日豊線
  • Oita-Daigaku-mae 豊肥線
  • Sakanoichi 日豊線
  • Shikido 豊肥線
  • Naka-Handa 豊肥線
  • Maki 日豊線
  • Minami-Oita 久大線
  • Kokokufu 久大線
  • Kaku 久大線
  • Nishi-Oita 日豊線
  • Takio 豊肥線
  • Bungo-Kokubu 久大線
  • Oita 久大線
  • Oita 豊肥線
  • Kozaki 日豊線
  • Takenaka 豊肥線
Fishing Ports 6
  • Oita Fishing Port
  • Ohira Fishing Port
  • Shizuki Fishing Port
  • Shiraki Fishing Port
  • Kanzaki Fishing Port
  • Fukumizu Fishing Port
Museums Cultural Properties Natural Parks Stations Fishing Ports