From the AURA index Region

Sakae, Chiba

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Chiba / Sakae
A reading of this place

Flat paddies stretch out from the road, broken only by the occasional cluster of burial mounds rising from the earth. This is Sakae-machi, tucked between the Tone River to the north and Inba-numa to the south, a town shaped as much by water as by the centuries of rice farming that water made possible. The ancient tumuli of Ryūkakuji Kofun-gun, built by the Inba district rulers in the sixth and seventh centuries, stand quietly beside contemporary fields — not roped off or dramatized, just present, as if the land has simply absorbed them.

Ryūkakuji itself, founded in the seventh century and still a Tendai temple, sits near the kofun. A few kilometers away, Chiba Prefectural Boso-no-Mura reconstructs Edo-period townscapes and lets visitors handle craft and food in ways that feel closer to a working demonstration than a museum display. The town's own products carry a particular local logic: black soybeans grown here become *doramame*, and from those beans come a shochu called *doramusuko*, as well as black-bean *nama* castella and *gin-jo-shu* cake from Kappō Kanadaya. The Ōwashi Shrine's *kofun* candy, sold around the December tori-no-ichi market, belongs to the same quiet continuum of local production.

Anshoku Station on the JR Narita Line is modest — a single station anchoring a town that sits roughly between Chiba and the northern Kanto plain. The Waka-kusa Bridge, opened over the Tone River in 2006, connects Sakae to Ibaraki Prefecture, adding a new axis to a place that has long been defined by its encircling water. Nothing here announces itself loudly. The layers — kofun, temple, paddy, factory, shrine market — simply coexist.

Inside this place

What converges here

美術館 1
文化財 3
  • 龍角寺古墳群・岩屋古墳 Historic Site
  • 龍角寺境内ノ塔阯 Historic Site
  • 旧御子神家住宅(旧所在 千葉県安房郡丸山町) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
美術館 文化財