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Chichibu Night Festival
In December, when most festivals have long ended, Chichibu lights its winter sky. This is…
In December, when most festivals have long ended, Chichibu lights its winter sky. This is one of Japan's three great float festivals, alongside Kyoto's Gion and Takayama's. Six lacquered floats, some weighing more than ten tons and rising three stories high, are hauled through narrow streets by teams of chanting men. The festival grew from this mountain town's silk trade, a once-a-year offering of thanks. Its climax comes on the night of December 3, when the floats are pulled up a steep incline called Dango-zaka while fireworks detonate overhead in the cold, clear air. The carvings are so ornate the floats have been likened to moving temples. A UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
The limestone flank of Bukōzan has been quarried for generations, and its white scar is visible from the basin floor on clear days — a reminder that Chichibu's mountains are not merely scenery but working geology. The Arakawa cuts through the same basin from southwest to northeast, carving river terraces where the town's older streets still follow the logic of freight and pilgrimage. Chichibu Ōkansen, the old road linking this basin to Kōshū, once moved silk and salt; the town it fed grew into a distribution node wrapped in forest, with shrines at its margins and limestone at its roots.
The food that comes out of this landscape is particular: shiitake菜漬 and konnyaku from the mountain valleys, miso-cured meat that keeps through long winters, and sake from breweries like Busshūmasamune and Chichibu Nishiki drawing on local water. Ichiro's Malt, now known well beyond the prefecture, is distilled here too — whisky from a basin that produces, quietly, more than its size suggests. At Fudō-no-Yu, a single inn on the banks of the Yokose River, the kitchen runs to sansai and river fish, the kind of meal that accounts for what grew or swam nearby.
The Chichibu Yomatsuri, held in early winter, brings enormous floats through the old town streets at night — a festival dense enough in its own tradition to have a dedicated exhibition hall, the Chichibu Matsuri Kaikan. The Ryūsei Matsuri, with its hand-launched rockets, has its own hall too, the Ryūsei Kaikan. Beneath all of this, in the Saitama Prefectural Museum of Natural History, the fossils of marine mammals from the ancient Chichibu Bay lie in cases — evidence that these mountains were once seafloor, that the basin holds deep time as well as local custom.
Stay in Chichibu, Saitama
What converges here
- Tochimoto Barrier Site
- Furu-Chichibu Bay Sedimentary Layers and Marine Mammal Fossil Group
- Uchida Residence (Maita, Chichibu, Saitama)
- Chichibu-Tama-Kai
- Fudo no Yu
- Mount Karamatsuo
- Mount Obora
- Mount Hakuseki
- Seibu-Chichibu
- Ohana-batake
- Chichibu
- Onohara
- Kagemori
- Wado-Kurotani
- Mitsumineguchi
- Bushu-Nakagawa
- Bushu-Hino
- Urayamaguchi
- Shiroku