Matsuri Days (3): A Guide to Hakata and the Yamakasa Festival

Fukuoka: The Ancient Gateway to Japan

Society Culture Lifestyle

Fukuoka is the largest city in Kyūshū. From ancient times, the city’s proximity to the mainland has made it an important gateway for cultural influences from China and Korea. Two members of the Nippon.com editorial team visited the city in search of traces of its ancient links to the continent.

The Gateway to Japan

The beautiful object in the picture above, intricately decorated with birds and flowers, is a porcelain pillow made in Tang China during the eighth or ninth century. Today, the pillow is one of a number of items on display in the Kōrokan historical museum in Hakata, which makes an ideal introduction to the ancient links between the city and the Asian mainland. The pillow’s fetching design and appealing decoration still catch the eye today, more than a thousand years after it was made. All those years ago, it must have been a precious object indeed, and surely belonged to a member of the local elite. But how did this ancient Chinese treasure come to rest here today, in the midst of a modern city in southern Japan?

The building that originally stood on this site, known as the Kōrokan, was one of three guesthouses that provided accommodation to overseas visitors during the early years of Japanese history. The other two were in Kyoto and Osaka. Fukuoka city official Yoshitake Manabu explains the importance of the site: “The Kōrokan was established here in Hakata for a very simple reason. In those days, this was the point of arrival for visitors from the Asian mainland. Diplomatic missions and traders visiting Japan from Tang China or Shilla [in modern Korea] would all land here first. For hundreds of years, Hakata served as the gateway to Japan.

The foundations and other features of the excavated remains have been left as they were found.

How the Kōrokan might have looked in historic times.

The excavated finds at the Kōrakan include many items that were brought east along the Silk Road. These shards of a porcelain jar from close to modern Iran are still brilliantly blue today.

The area to the east of the Kōrokan is reclaimed land. The shoreline used to pass directly through the point where the museum stands today.

Not far from the Kōrokan is the site of Fukuoka Castle, built for the feudal lord Kuroda Nagamasa in the early seventeenth century. Set into the floor of the visitor center today is a remarkably detailed relief map showing a bird’s-eye view of the local area as it would have appeared in the middle of the nineteenth century, before the Meiji Restoration that brought the feudal era to an end in 1868. The model makes it strikingly clear how the castle must have dominated the area, towering over the surrounding landscape of low-rise houses and streets. The castle was built on the same strategic site that once housed the Kōrokan.

The scale model of the castle town is remarkably detailed. A closer look reveals individual streets and houses, as seen in the view on the right.

 

next: Spiritual and Technological Lessons from the Mainland

Related Tags

tourism Kyūshū China Zen Korea mainland festival Hakata Fukuoka continent weaving

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