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Kotsubo-kagura Shrine Dance
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Kotsubo-kagura Shrine Dance

culture

Kotsubo-kagura Shrine Dance

小坪神楽

Est. 90Kure, Chugoku
JTA Approved

Overview

Kagura is a form of dance performed as an offering to Shinto deities, most often during shrine festivals.

Kotsubo-kagura is a six-hour ritual dance performed at the Kotsubo Hachiman Jinja Shrine Festival in Kure, usually on the weekend closest to October 20. The 21-dance sequence opens by summoning the deity Hachiman, then shifts to 16 entertaining pieces for both the god and the human crowd. The tradition traces back over 200 years to sailors from the lime-producing district of Hirokotsubo who encountered this style of kagura on Omi Island and brought it home. Women have participated since 1985, while elementary and middle school students from town now play the accompanying flutes.

Local tips

Purify your hands at the temizuya before approaching the main hall. Left hand first, then right, then pour water into your left hand to rinse your mouth.

Practical info

Japanese name
小坪神楽
Nearest station
Hiroshima Station (10 min walk)
Payment
Cash only
Reservations
not required
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