THE BUSHOZAN DAIMYO’S PARADE
2011年11月11日

Fall is here and it’s the perfect time to be out an about, so with camera and fellow blogger Cathy Hirano from Cathy’s Blog (please Google Cathy’s Blog Takamatsu and it’ll come up), we went out to cover one day of the 2 day annual event on October Sunday 16th.
Bushozan is an easy 320-yen commute from Takamatsu Chikko Station, just across the road from Takamatsu JR Central Station and then by the Kotoden train, which is something between a train and a tramcar. A leisurely twenty minutes and we were both at the Bushozan Station and in time for the parade and festivities. The previous evening there’d been a fireworks display.


Cathy will explain more about the historical aspects of this great festival and I went mainly to look at the color, samurai sword fights, chambara the staple of all samurai movies, also costumes, hairstyles and pageantry. The locals were clearly in a festival mood and so I’ve tried to capture a bit of this with photos as an incentive for yourselves to visit, so please enjoy them and let me know if you’d like more specific details.




The Daimyo’s (Feudal Lord) times must have been colorful if not a little precarious given the moody samurai strolling about and not taking any cheek from anyone. There’s a strong ambience of things past in Bushozan with it’s beautiful temple, Edo period buildings and of course the Daimyo’s visit to the same of which the parade is a reenactment. A couple of professional actors from Kyoto were there on the day to show swordsmanship in the streets. They were accompanied by a great many locals dressed up in period costumes and including a couple of foreign residents, which was nice to see. I asked them where they’d gotten the period costumes and they’d previously rented from Eiga Mura (Movie Village) in Kyoto but now had another source.
It all looked pretty convincing to me, with guttural insults and curses, loud shouts, grunts all with swishing of swords.



I was very taken in by the Samurai’s use of firearms and couldn’t help but wonder what an awesome sight the first firearms must have been to these people when they first arrived in Japan.


The Japanese quickly copied and then refined them of course and made them a part of their armory. This must have really been a game changer in those times. It’s pretty hard to duck a gunshot or deflect with a sword so it’s my guess that whoever got them first called the shots pardon the pun. No speed loading though with a fizzling rope as the lighter.
The festival is a must see for any foreign tourists, runs a full two days and the parade finishes up in the new and very beautiful Bushozan park.






Please check out Cathy’s blog for more on this and I’ll be back soon so keep all those cards n’ letters coming in! The comments box has been very lonely lately …
"Pat has lived in Takamatsu continuously since arriving here on a one year study and leave 1981. Originally from Tasmania, Australia, he was involved in education at a variety of levels including as a specialist teacher for children with learning difficulties, and at senior high schools throughout the state. Pat is employed full-time by the i-pal Kagawa International Exchange as a co-oridintaor for international relations amongst other duties including traveling to schools and giving talks in Japanese to kids about Australia. He has been involved with youth education exchanges between Japan and Australia for many years.
Pat has been many things in his colorful life including a seaman, helmsman, welder, carpenter, traffic warden, scholarship/studentship winner at the university of Tasmania, staff at the Australian Embassy in London to name but a few. Pat has far too many hobbies which include tennis, playing jazz flutes and saxes, riding bicycles with the Takamatsu Cycling Club all of which his long-suffering family tolerate. Recently he's become interested in painting again. His wife wishes he would put more time in to helping around the house and the garden which he artfully avoids ..."
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Posted by pat at 08:19
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この記事へのコメント
おもしろそうなお祭りですね。
京都の時代祭りのようなものなんでしょうね。
でも、規模が小さいだけに、身近に見られて一緒に楽しめそう!
京都の時代祭りのようなものなんでしょうね。
でも、規模が小さいだけに、身近に見られて一緒に楽しめそう!
Posted by ひのえうま at 2011年10月31日 23:37