A thorough visit to the pottery in the village of porcelain, born from a series of miracles

pottery village Imari (10)

The concentration of pottery production areas in this area, including Imari ware, Arita ware, and Hasami ware, is a product of Hideyoshi’s invasion of Korea, and began when potters who came from Korea settled there and discovered high-quality pottery stone.    After this, the Chinese Civil War caused a decrease in porcelain exports from China, and Imari ware was fortunate enough to replace the demand in Europe.    Furthermore, the trade route at the time, which ran from Southeast Asia through the Indian Ocean, was controlled by the Dutch East India Company, and Japan was fortunate enough to be open to trade with the Netherlands during the period of national isolation.    It seems to me that these three miracles have made the ceramics industry thrive today.

pottery village Imari (3)Remains of the checkpoint where potters were imprisoned
pottery village Imari (3)Remains of the checkpoint where potters were imprisoned

During the Edo period, the ceramics industry was under the control of the feudal domain, and talented people were gathered there, enriching the domain’s finances.    Imari ware (Nabeshima ware) is said to have confined its potters to narrow mountainous areas and installed a checkpoint to prevent the outflow of its techniques.

Hasami ware, which is used for everyday use, was apparently launched as an independent brand from Arita ware after regulations for the labeling of origin were established, and it has maintained a strong position as a product for everyday use.    What originally prompted me to visit the Hasami ware workshop in Nakaoyama was the workshop’s name (reverse seal) engraved on the back of the rice bowls I use every day.    Hasami ware is made for everyday use, so large quantities are fired at once, and so there are still traces of climbing kilns built along the mountain slopes.     From the walking path around these kilns, you can see the many chimneys of the kilns, which is quite picturesque, but there are quite a few ups and downs, so we recommend taking a walk before shopping.

There were no foreign tourists at Nakaoyama, but there were many foreign visitors in the world-famous Okawauchi town of Imari.    They hold pottery markets in different seasons, so it’s easier to stop by at those times and there are many bargains to be had.     However, it can get very crowded.    There is still a workshop in Okawauchi Town, but it is so small that most of the factories are located outside.

The autumn pottery market was happening at the time, and there were a few stalls set up along the way.    It has nothing to do with pottery, and I was caught by an older man from the Ureshino tea producing area in Saga, who gave me a lecture on how to brew tea.    The key is to use a teapot with a deep tea strainer so that the tea leaves can move freely, and not to move the leaves inside once the hot water is poured in.     To avoid bitterness, do not turn the teapot, and do not steep the tea for too long, in order to preserve its vibrant color.    This certainly makes the tea flavor linger in your mouth for hours, but the amount of tea leaves that tea makers generously add is impossible to replicate at home.

Detour

When you think of kappa, you probably think of the Tono Monogatari(Story) from Iwate Prefecture or the trademark of Kyoto’s Kizakura Sake Brewery, which is famous for its commercials.    However, Matsuura Ichi Brewery has had a connection with kappa for even longer than that.     The reason is that a kappa mummy was discovered in the brewery.    The real thing is enshrined here.     We don’t know if it’s really a kappa, but we don’t know why it was kept in this storehouse.     I think it’s better to leave it as a mystery without investigating.

The aroma of the Junmai Ginjo had a gorgeous melon aroma, and I remembered that Matsuura City is a melon-producing region.    Surprisingly, this brewery specializes in plum wine, made by soaking pickled plums in undiluted sake, not shochu.     You’ll be surprised at how rich the flavor is, so be sure to give it a try.

karatsu kunchi fes (12)
Go back to Itinerary

No one knows that Hachinohe alone has three national treasures

hacchi clay figurine3 national teue mark
korekawa ruins2 shade clay figurine
korekawa ruins2 shade clay figurine

The Jomon cultural area can be found in unexpected places.   The Suwa region has long been famous for the area because we know that the Jomon people came from all over Japan to search the place of production of obsidian, the raw material for arrowheads.    But the Hokkaido/Northern Tohoku Jomon Archaeological Sites, which are registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, had gone completely unnoticed (no attention was paid to them).   They lived in Hokkaido and northern Tohoku, separated by the strait, for over 10,000 years, forming the same cultural sphere.    We know that they were part of the same cultural sphere because the clay figurines and pottery normaly made by women are almost the same and especially the patterns on them are the same, which means that women of the same blood traveled between these cultural spheres.   

korekawa ruins3 It's my job to cut the grass
Cleaning staff in charge of cleaning around korekawa Jomon Museum

There is the Korekawa Jomon Museum in the outskirts of Hachinohe, where there is a clay figurine with palms together in a sitting position as the National Treasure.    I have never seen a sitting position before.   This clay figurine has female genitalia, so she may be praying for childbirth or a child.    We know that people have been praying with their hands together since the Jomon period.    The Venus of the Suwa region as the National Treasure also looks like a pregnant woman.

korekawa ruins1 palms together clay figurine
korekawa ruins1 palms together clay figurine

Also close to Hachinohe Station is Kushibiki Hachiman Shrine, the guardian deity of the Nanbu clan that has been in operation since the Kamakura period.  Hachiman Shrine is a shrine that offers eternal good fortune in war, and as such, armor and helmets from the Kamakura and Nanboku-cho periods are enshrined there.    However, these national treasure armor and helmets are more magnificent works of art than armor suitable for fighting.

This shrine also has something unique: at the entrance to the shrine, there are a pair of guardian lion statues, but here they are horses statues.    On the side of the main shrine there is a wooden carving of a kappa being trampled by a hawk because of its mischievous behaviour.    Later, when the Nanbu clan was transferred to Tono in Iwate Prefecture, this kappa legend was transferred with it and forms part of the Tono Stories.

Detour

The Sannai-Maruyama ruins, part of the Hokkaido/Northern Tohoku Jomon Archaeological Sites as a UNESCO-registered cultural heritage site, is located near Shin-Aomori Station on the Shinkansen line.    Traces of a village that existed for nearly 2,000 years during the Jomon period remain vividly.    Large-scale raised-floor buildings and pit dwellings have been restored.

 

enburi at brewery (1)
Go back to itinerary