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Tendo Human Shogi: Living Pieces on a Giant Board
Tendo produces more shogi pieces than anywhere else in Japan, and the Human Shogi festival…
Tendo produces more shogi pieces than anywhere else in Japan, and the Human Shogi festival is the city's annual celebration of this particular identity. The slope of Maizuruyama is divided into squares; people dressed in samurai costume take the roles of the pieces; professional shogi players make the actual moves, and the human pieces respond accordingly.
You do not need to know shogi to enjoy this. The visual spectacle of costumed figures moving across a hillside under cherry blossoms, directed by the invisible logic of a board game, is engaging on its own terms. The crowd's reaction to each move reveals when something significant has happened, even without understanding what it was.
The festival is a reminder that the best local celebrations emerge naturally from what a place actually does. Tendo makes shogi pieces; Tendo plays shogi on a hillside in April. The connection is direct, the pride is genuine, and the result is a festival that could not exist anywhere else.
Chess pieces appear on bridge railings, carved into stone monuments, pressed into the ironwork of lamp posts — Tendo announces its identity before you've left the station. The town sits in an inland basin where the Midaregawa and Tachiyagawa rivers mark the edges of flat, alluvial farmland, the Ou Mountains rising abruptly to the east. Shogi-koma manufacturing has been rooted here for generations, and the craft shows up in unexpected places: a small display case in a shopfront, a maker's workshop glimpsed through a half-open door.
The cultural layer runs deeper than the chess-piece motif suggests. Dewazakura Shuzo, founded in the Meiji era, produces ginjo and nama-zake and was among the early advocates for bringing Japanese sake to international attention. The Dewazakura Museum of Art, housed nearby, holds Korean Joseon dynasty crafts alongside ceramics and paintings by Saito Shinichi — an accumulation that feels personal rather than institutional. Up on Maizuruyama, the ruins of Tendo Castle become, each April, the stage for Ningen Shogi, a festival in which people costumed as pieces are moved across a giant board by professional players.
West Numata Ruins Park preserves the outline of a farming settlement from roughly fifteen hundred years ago — reconstructed raised-floor granaries, rice paddy traces, a guidance facility where visitors can try making magatama beads. Wakamatsuzanji, a Tendai temple opened in the early eighth century, sits quietly as the first stop on the Mogami Thirty-Three Kannon pilgrimage. Tendo Onsen is a short walk from the station, its waters shaped by the basin's sharp swings between heat and cold. Cherries and La France pears grow in the surrounding fields, their harvest rhythms folded into the town's calendar alongside the click of carved wood.
Stay in Tendo, Yamagata
What converges here
- Nishinumata Site
- Wakamatsu-ji Kannondo
- Zao
- Tendo Onsen
- Tendo
- Midaregawa
- Tendo-Minami
- Takadama