The Calendar of the Yearly Festivals

家紋 Inaba and Tajima Inaba and Tajima
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084 084 Yutokoro Shrine

因幡 INABA

Tottori City Yutokoro Town

Picture of the Kirin’s Head

Picture of the Shoujou’s Mask

Date of the Festival April-27, 28, and 29
Time for the Kirin Dance at the Shrine Eve of the festival on April-27: 7 p.m. at the shrine
Festival day on April-29: 9 a.m. in front of the local houses
Origin Mid-Edo period (Tenmei 8 (1788))
Characteristics This Kirin head is the oldest among the ones with a specified production year. The Kirin dance resumed in 1995 after a 40 year long halt. The dance is not performed on April-28. The Kirin’s head was crafted in 1788.
Area Tottori City Yutokoro Town

Related Information

Archive of Tottori Traditional Arts: Kirin Dances

Sites Associated with the Kirin Dances

Monuments around the Tottori Station

  • Wooden Benches

  • Sand Sculpture of Kirin

  • Stone Sculpture of Kirin

  • Tottori Toshogu in the Ouchidani Park

    Tottori Toshogu was established by Mitsunaka Ikeda, a local lord, in the 17th century, and is a branch shrine of Nikko Toshogu. The shrine inherits the initial Kirin, which is now stored in the Tottori Prefectural Museum. During Gongen Matsuri, a festival in October, members of the Inaba Kirin Dance Club dance before the shrine’s deity, and a procession of a mikoshi (portable shrine) walks through to animate the festival.

  • The Imeitei Pioneer Memorial Gallery of Hamasaka

    Imeitei is a gallery remodeled by Shichikamaya Yashiki (Shichikamaya Mansion) of the Mori family, who until lately ran a sake-brewery. It is a historical and folk gallery where visitors can trace the footsteps of the pioneers living around the Shin-onsen Town. The head of the Kirin from the Utsuno Shrine is displayed in the gallery. It is designated as the town’s cultural heritage.

  • Sora no Eki Park (Sky Station Park) at the Amarube Bridge

    The origin of the Kirin from the Junisha Shrine, a shrine in adjacent to the Yoroi district, is the Kirin dance performed in the Iwami Town. This dance was a part of the inauguration of the Amarube Bridge at the end of the Meiji period. Visitors can see children’s drawings of the Kirin displayed in Sora no Eki at the Amarube Bridge and the park at the foot of the Amarube Crystal Tower. The roadside stations in vicinity are also worth sightseeing.