Próximo Festivales📍 Por todo JapónOfficial

Hachinohe Sansha Taisai 2027

For five days every July 31-August 4, 27 towering, gold-leafed floats and three shrines' mikoshi processions fill Hachinohe's streets - a 300-year-old harvest-thanksgiving festival and UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage that draws over a million visitors.

A towering, elaborately decorated float (dashi) of the Hachinohe Sansha Taisai on parade through the city
Foto: 8-Forest · CC BY-SA 4.0
Ver y reservar en Original ↗

Cuándo · Dónde

Cuándo
2027/07/31 18:00 – 2027/08/04
Dónde
Chuo-dori / Omote-dori, central Hachinohe (Sannichi-machi, Jusannichi-machi and Nijusannichi-machi)(Jusannichi-machi, Hachinohe, Aomori 031-0042 (central viewing street))
Ciudad
Por todo Japón
Cómo llegar
Take the Tohoku Shinkansen to Hachinohe Station, then the local JR Hachinohe Line (about 6-8 minutes) to Hon-Hachinohe Station; the Omote-dori viewing streets in the city centre are a 5-10 minute walk from the station, and paid grandstand seating is set up directly along the route for the three main parade days.
Precio
Gratis
Organizador
Hachinohe Sansha Taisai Operating Committee (八戸三社大祭運営委員会), c/o VISIT Hachinohe

Bueno saber antes de ir

Cómo llegar
Take the Tohoku Shinkansen to Hachinohe Station, then the local JR Hachinohe Line (about 6-8 minutes) to Hon-Hachinohe Station; the Omote-dori viewing streets in the city centre are a 5-10 minute walk from the station, and paid grandstand seating is set up directly along the route for the three main parade days. Abrir ruta en Google Maps ↗
Reserva y entrada
Entrada gratuita: más detalles en la página oficial (botón de arriba).
Idioma
Principalmente en japonés: una app de traducción en el móvil ayuda.
Ideal para
amantes de la cultura

Destacados

  • 27 elaborately carved and gold-leafed floats (dashi), each up to 8m wide, 11m deep and 10m tall, are largely rebuilt every year by their own neighborhood associations and paraded alongside the mikoshi of three shrines
  • Named for the joint festival of Ogami Shrine, Chojagashira Shinra Shrine and Shinmei-gu, whose portable shrines process through the city in a different order on the outbound Otori (Aug 1) and return Okaeri (Aug 3) days
  • A UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2016 (part of Japan's 33 'Yama, Hoko, Yatai' float festivals) and a national Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property since 2004, tracing back to a 1721 harvest-thanksgiving procession

Origen e historia

The festival began in 1721, when Horyo-sha (法霊社, now Ogami Shrine) held a mikoshi procession to Chojagashira in thanks for a good harvest; Shinmei-gu and Chojagashira Shinra Shrine later joined to form the three-shrine festival, and neighborhood floats were added over the following centuries. It was designated a national Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property in 2004 and inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2016.

Bueno saber

The evening of Aug 2 (Chunichi) is when floats parade lit up after dark - arguably the most photogenic night to visit. Aug 1 (Otori) and Aug 3 (Okaeri) are the two big procession days; arrive early to claim free standing space, since the popular stretches of Omote-dori fill up well before the floats appear.

On-the-ground coverage of Japan's festivals, culture and nightlife.