Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi
1 upcoming event
Yoshida Fire Festival
On the evening of August 26, more than seventy torches — each three meters tall — are lit…
On the evening of August 26, more than seventy torches — each three meters tall — are lit simultaneously along a two-kilometer stretch of road at the foot of Mount Fuji.
The street becomes a corridor of fire.
This is the Chinka Taisai, a ritual to appease the mountain's eruptions, and to mark the close of the climbing season.
One of Japan's three great "strange festivals." A national intangible folk cultural property.
The mountain is open all summer to anyone who wants to climb it. One night a year, the town reminds you it belongs to the gods.
The road into town climbs through volcanic terrain, the air noticeably cooler by the time the first houses appear. Fujiyoshida sits on the northern flank of Fuji, its streets oriented as if still taking directions from the mountain itself. The old approach to Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine runs through the center of town — a long, cedar-lined avenue that once funneled pilgrims from Edo toward the summit. That traffic shaped everything: the *oshi* lodging houses, the dense neighborhood fabric, the particular seriousness with which the town has always held its relationship to the mountain.
The shrine remains a functioning center of gravity rather than a museum piece. In late August, the Yoshida Fire Festival fills Honmachi-dori with rows of burning torches, the heat and smoke less a spectacle than a continuation of something older. The craft history runs parallel: *Gunai* textiles were woven here for generations, and the ハタオリマチフェスティバル still draws people who care about cloth and thread. In the narrow streets of the Nishiura district, Showa-era storefronts press close together, their signs faded to the same gray-brown as old silk.
Lunch in Fujiyoshida means *Yoshida no udon* — thick, firm noodles with a roughness that is deliberate, not accidental — eaten at counters where the broth is ladled without ceremony. The Fuji Yoshida City Historical Museum holds the longer story: the *fujiko* pilgrimage confraternities, the *oshi* who guided them, the old Togawa residence still standing as a world heritage component. The town does not perform its history; it simply continues to inhabit it.
What converges here
- Mt. Fuji – Sacred Place and Source of Artistic Inspiration
- Mt. Fuji
- Yoshida Tainai Jukei Lava Tree Molds
- Wisteria of Yamanokamino
- Tsutsujigatara Rengetutuji and Fujizakura Grove
- Karinoanana
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine Tonomiya Main Hall
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine Nishimiya Honden
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine Main Hall
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine
- Former Togawa Family Residence (Kamiyoshida, Fujiyoshida City, Yamanashi Prefecture)
- Osano Family Residence (Kamiyoshida, Fujiyoshida City, Yamanashi)
- Osano Family Residence (Kamiyoshida, Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi)
- Former Togawa Residence (Yamanashi Prefecture, Fujiyoshida City, Kamiyoshida)
- Former Togawa Family Residence (Kamiyoshida, Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi)
- Fuji-Hakone-Izu
- Fujisan
- Shimo-Yoshida
- Gekkeiji
- Kotobuki
- Yoshiike-Onsen-mae
- Fujisan