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Fujisaki Hachimangu Boshita Matsuri 2026

Kumamoto's biggest autumn festival runs Sept 20-21, 2026: about 60 decorated parade horses and a twice-daily armored procession fill the streets, free to watch.

Grand torii gate of Fujisaki Hachimangu Shrine, Kumamoto
Photo: そらみみ · CC BY-SA 4.0
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Quand ·

Quand
2026/09/20 06:00 – 2026/09/21
Fujisaki Hachimangu Shrine(3-1 Igawabuchi-machi, Chuo-ku, Kumamoto City, Kumamoto 860-0841)
Ville
Partout au Japon
Y aller
Kumamoto City Tram from Kumamoto Station to the Suidocho stop (about 15 min), then a 15-minute walk; or a bus from Kumamoto Station to Kumamoto Sakuramachi Bus Terminal (10 min), transfer toward Kogai to the Fujisaki Shrine-mae stop (15 min), then a 5-minute walk.
Prix
Gratuit
Organisateur
Fujisaki Hachimangu Shrine (藤崎八旛宮)

Bon à savoir avant d’y aller

Y aller
Kumamoto City Tram from Kumamoto Station to the Suidocho stop (about 15 min), then a 15-minute walk; or a bus from Kumamoto Station to Kumamoto Sakuramachi Bus Terminal (10 min), transfer toward Kogai to the Fujisaki Shrine-mae stop (15 min), then a 5-minute walk. Ouvrir l’itinéraire dans Google Maps ↗
Réservation & entrée
Gratuit : détails sur la page officielle (bouton ci-dessus).
Langue
Principalement en japonais : une appli de traduction sur le téléphone aide.
Idéal pour
amateurs de culture, familles, groupes d’amis

À ne pas manquer

  • The festival's finale, 'Umaoi' -- about 60 elaborately decorated parade horses (kazariuma) and roughly 11,000+ participants from 59+ neighborhood groups, led through the streets to cries of 'Dokai, dokai!'
  • A twice-daily 'Zuihei Gyoretsu' armored procession (morning from about 6:00, evening from about 14:00) carrying four mikoshi and around 100 spear-bearing attendants in traditional dress
  • A 400-year-old lion dance from the Shinmachi district accompanies the procession

Origine & histoire

Fujisaki Hachimangu traces its founding to 935 as a branch shrine of Kyoto's Iwashimizu Hachimangu. The autumn grand festival grew out of the Buddhist-Shinto 'hojo-e' rite of releasing captive animals, with its horse-and-warrior procession echoing a centuries-old military-thanksgiving tradition. (The festival's colloquial nickname has one popular but disputed folk explanation tied to a 16th-century military campaign; the shrine itself moved away from that chant around 1990, and the procession's official calls today are 'Dokai, dokai.')

Bon à savoir

Keep a safe distance during the horse parade -- decorated horses can startle in the crowds, and organizers have restricted some participants after past incidents; flash photography near the horses is discouraged. The Sunday, Sept 20 procession draws the biggest crowds, so arrive early for a clear view near the shrine or along the parade route.

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