Aoki, Nagano
The road into Aoki-mura narrows as the mountains close in — Fugamidake and Kodanmine forming a rough semicircle to the north, west, and south, leaving only the eastern slope to open gently toward Ueda. Most of the land here is forest. The village sits on terraced ground between five hundred and eight hundred meters, and in the fields below the treeline, farmers grow soba, matsutake, and a rice variety called Tachiakane. A small winery operates somewhere in that agricultural mix, pressing grapes from the same elevation that keeps the air cool.
The village has refused merger with surrounding municipalities, a decision that fits a longer pattern. Aoki-mura has a documented history of peasant uprisings — five of them — and the term *gimin no sato*, village of righteous people, still circulates in local memory. The Aoki-mura Historical and Cultural Museum holds the artifacts from those episodes alongside pottery from ancient sites. Up at Shunara Pass, 860 stone Buddhist figures stand among the trees in rows that feel neither curated nor abandoned, simply accumulated over time. Closer to the village center, the three-storied pagoda of Daihoji, a National Treasure, rises without announcement beside the road.
Tazawa Onsen and Kutsukake Onsen both carry the designation of national recuperation hot springs, and the bathhouses in Tazawa retain something of an Edo-period atmosphere — worn wood, narrow lanes, the smell of sulfur cutting through cold air. Commuters drive east to Ueda each morning, and the Hokuriku Shinkansen connects that city to Tokyo in roughly two hours. Aoki-mura absorbs that proximity without being consumed by it.
What converges here
- 大法寺三重塔
- 大法寺観音堂厨子及び須弥壇