Nomi, Ishikawa
Pottery dust and glaze pigment are ordinary things here. The kilns of Nomi have been producing Kutani ware for centuries — the vivid overglaze palette known as Kutani Gosaicontinues to be fired in workshops around the city, and the Kutani Tōgeimura complex offers both a place to watch the craft and to attempt it yourself. Every spring, the Kutani Chawan Matsuri draws people who come specifically to handle the ware, turn a cup in their hands, and perhaps carry one home wrapped in newspaper.
Beneath the flat agricultural land of the Kaga plain, the earth holds something older. The Nomi Kofun Cluster — burial mounds distributed across several sites including Akitsuneyama and Suehijiyama — marks this as a place of early settlement, long before the kilns were lit. The Nomi Furusato Museum holds the thread between that buried past and the present town.
The city that emerged from the 2005 merger of Neagari, Terai, and Tatsunokuchi carries its layers without ceremony. Tatsu-no-kuchi Onsen, discovered in the Tenpō era, still operates as a public bath at the edge of the hills. The Matsui Hideki Baseball Museum stands a short walk from the station — a different kind of local pride, concrete and unheroic in its display cases. The Neagari Tanabata Matsuri and the Tatsunokuchi Matsuri mark the calendar in ways that have little to do with tourism and rather more to do with the rhythm of a town that simply gets on with things.
What converges here
- 能美古墳群 寺井山古墳群 和田山古墳群 末寺山古墳群 秋常山古墳群 西山古墳群