Harima, Hyogo
The ground beneath Harima-cho holds centuries of layered occupation. In the park known as Harima Onaka Kodai no Mura, the post-holes and thatched outlines of reconstructed pit dwellings from the Yayoi period sit open to the sky, neither roped off nor over-interpreted. Beside them, the Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Archaeology offers hands-on engagement with the material culture pulled from the Onaka site — one of the most extensively researched archaeological concentrations in the prefecture.
Yet step a few minutes in any direction and the ancient gives way to the industrial. The shoreline south of the Kisegawa basin is shaped by reclaimed land — Shinjima and Higashi-Shinjima — where facilities like the Kawasaki Heavy Industries Harima plant define the skyline. The town's products are not ceramics or lacquerware but absorbent resins and fine chemicals, things manufactured rather than crafted by hand. At the Komiya fishing port, though, the haenawa longline boats still bring in conger eel, sea bass, and octopus from the Seto Inland Sea, and that catch moves through the town in a quieter register.
The Ae Shrine, whose four-hall main sanctuary dates to the mid-Edo period and carries a prefectural designation, anchors the older residential fabric. Its autumn festival — the Ae Jinja Aki Matsuri — briefly reorganizes the neighborhood around procession rather than commute. The Harima-cho Station on the Sanyo Electric Railway, its platform sunk underground since the late 1980s, and the older JR Tsuchiyama Station together give the town two different temporal registers to move between, depending on which direction you are heading.