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Iwami Kagura Regular Performances
They dance all night. Iwami Kagura comes from the western end of Shimane, and it is at on…
They dance all night.
Iwami Kagura comes from the western end of Shimane, and it is at once a sacred rite and pure entertainment. On the night of an autumn festival the dancing begins in the shrine hall and goes on until dawn, the whole village watching.
The great serpent appears—the eight-headed dragon of the old myth, its bodies metres long, coiling across the stage. The serpent's trunk is built of paper folded like a lantern, and it stretches, loops, tangles, and breathes fire. The music is fast, faster than the kagura of neighbouring Izumo, and the audience claps along; children press to the very front of the stage, unable to look away.
A dance offered to the gods has no business being this much fun. But it is. The villagers watch through the night, rubbing their eyes, and the long kagura night somehow passes in an instant before the sky goes pale.
Iwami Kagura
Serpents writhe across the entire stage. In the Iwami region of western Shimane, performer…
Serpents writhe across the entire stage. In the Iwami region of western Shimane, performers in dazzling masks and embroidered robes dance to driving music, enacting the old myths. The most famous piece, Yamata-no-Orochi, brings out long-bodied serpents that breathe fire, coil around one another, and fill the floor. The form is ancient, danced as an offering to the gods at shrine festivals, but after the Meiji era a faster eight-beat style spread and gave it the theatrical energy it has today. The costumes, heavy with gold-thread embroidery, can weigh more than ten kilograms and represent the height of local craft. Young people in the region carry the tradition forward, dancing through autumn nights at shrines across the area. The myths are still alive here, and still dancing.
The fishing boats at Furuminato and Tsuma come in with the morning, and the catch moves quickly through the port to wherever it needs to go. This is the rhythm that has organized Hamada for a long time — not the castle, which is gone, but the sea and what it yields. The city sits on the San'in coast of Shimane's Iwami region, and its identity is built from water: the Japan Sea to the north, rivers threading down from the Chugoku Mountains behind it.
What the 1872 earthquake left behind at Isomidatami-ga-ura is still there — a wide shelf of uplifted seabed, exposed and walkable, with nodule formations embedded in the rock face. The land itself records the event. Nearby, the ruins of Ishimi Kokubunji and the Shimofuhaiji pagoda site mark an older stratum of the place, when this stretch of coast held administrative weight under a different kind of authority. The Hamada Domain's castle-town period came later, and the Second Choshu Expedition passed through this territory, though little of that drama is visible now in the quiet streets.
Up in the mountains, Asahi Onsen sits in a valley where the snow accumulates heavily in winter — a different climate entirely from the coast below. The Nishi-Chugoku Sanchi natural park covers the high ground, and Daisa-yama rises from it. Between that interior and the harbor at Karakane, Hamada holds two distinct geographies within a single city, each with its own pace.
Stay in Hamada, Shimane
What converges here
- Shimogo Haiji Pagoda Ruins
- Sufu Tumulus
- Iwami Kokubunji Temple Ruins
- Misumi Ohira Cherry Tree
- Iwami Tatamigaura
- Nishi-Chugoku Sanchi
- Asahi Onsen
- Mount Osa
- Hamada
- Nishi-Hamada
- Miho-Mishumi
- Sufu
- Shimoko
- Okami
- Kushiro
- Orii
- Karakane Fishing Port
- Furuminato Fishing Port
- Tsuma Fishing Port
- Fukuura Fishing Port