Matsuri Days (4): Gion Festival and Kyoto

Gion Festival Displays Kyoto’s Lavish Hospitality

Culture Lifestyle

Every July tourists flock to the Gion Festival in Kyoto for the chance to see a parade of sumptuously decorated floats pass through the heart of the city. Nippon.com takes a look at the history and customs of this tradition-rich festival.

A Way to Ward Off Evil Spirits

The festival’s history dates back over 1,100 years, to a time when Kyoto suffered from deadly summer pestilence. The Kamo River, which runs through the city, regularly flooded in those days, especially during the early summer rainy season, and the stagnant water was a breeding ground for disease.

And Kyoto was not the only part of Japan that suffered from such natural disasters. In the year 869, the Jōgan Earthquake struck the northeast of Japan; it is thought to have had a magnitude of more than 8.4 and to have resulted in a tsunami comparable to that of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. Around this same period, Mount Fuji and Kyūshū’s Mount Aso also erupted. There was a belief among people at the time that such repeated natural disasters were a curse from the souls of those who had died violent deaths and that it was necessary to appease them. The Gion Festival originated from the rituals conducted at the Gion Shrine (today’s Yasaka Shrine) for the repose of those spirits.

The floats draw most of the attention today, but originally Yasaka Shrine’s three mikoshi (portable shrines) played the leading role, as Yoshida Kōjirō, president of the Gion Festival Floats Federation, explains: “For the mikoshi parade on July 17, the Shintō deity Susanoo-no-Mikoto and two other gods are carried in portable shrines to the otabisho, a resting point. They remain there until July 24, when they are carried back to Yasaka Shrine. The aim of the two rituals is to wash away impurity and ward off pestilence.”

The mikoshi carrying the Susanoo-no-Mikoto deity leaves Yasaka Shrine (left); the mayor of Kyoto delivers a speech in front of the three mikoshi (right).

The float parade was originally divided into two halves; one taking place before the mikoshi parade to welcome the gods, and the other taking place afterward to give them thanks. But now only the first parade is held.

The Pride of Kyoto

The floats, which were once a side show, moved to center stage thanks to the merchants of Kyoto. Commercial interests in the city, such as sake brewers and financiers, got a boost around 1336, when Kyoto once again became the capital, taking over from Kamakura. Each district of Kyoto began to flaunt its prosperity by producing a float.

After the city burned to the ground during the Ōnin War (1467–77), the Gion Festival was not held for a time, but the merchants revived the tradition and it effectively became their festival. As foreign trade flourished from the sixteenth century onward, the floats became more extravagant and impressive.

Ishikawa Takashi, president of the Foundation for the Preservation of Kita Kannon Yama, says that competition over who had the most splendid float was a part of the festival from the beginning. “Many of the merchants were frugal and lived modestly, but they didn’t hesitate to spend money on the festival. Extremely wealthy merchant families in the Rokkaku area, such as Mitsui and Matsuzakaya, spent huge sums to purchase textiles from distant Tibet and Persia as well as luxurious ornamentation. Merchants also invited their best clients at attend the festival. In short, the festival was a way for Kyoto merchants to display their hospitality.”

The floats are richly ornamented.

Because of the competition between merchants to display their affluence, valuable furnishings for the floats were imported from far and wide. Their accumulation of artistic treasures has led the floats to be dubbed “mobile museums,” and they inspire a deep pride in Kyoto citizens. A number of other Japanese cities have started their own festivals based on the Gion Festival—including, most notably, the Hakata Gion Yamakasa in Fukuoka, the Takayama Festival, and the Chichibu Night Festival.

The City Opens Up

Kyoto’s welcoming spirit is also apparent in the Byōbu Festival, held on the three days prior to the float parade. On display during this festival are the kinds of folding screens and art objects that merchants once kept in their storehouses and displayed to relatives and acquaintances.

“The Gion Festival is a time when Kyoto people open up and show visitors things that aren’t normally on display,” Ishikawa explains. This is part of the unique atmosphere that develops during festival season, reflecting the hospitality of Kyoto merchants.

Folding screens on display (left); tourists gather around a work of art (right).

(Photographs by Nakano Haruo)

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