A chapter of Japan
Hiroshima
23 towns and villages, listed not by rank but as they are — places you may not have met yet.
EVENTFestivals & gatherings
ISLANDThe islands
ONSENHot springs
TOWNSAll municipalities
- akiootachou The bus from Hiroshima city climbs steadily into the mountains, passing through tunnels and over rivers until the valley narrows and the cedars press close on either side.
- akitakatashi The JR Geibi Line slows through the hills of northern Hiroshima Prefecture, and by the time it reaches Yoshidaguchi Station, the landscape has settled into something quieter — small basins, ridgelines, the kind of terrain where medieval lords once built their strongholds on every available height.
- etajimashi Ferries cross between Etajima and the ports of Hiroshima and Kure with a regularity that shapes the day here.
- oosakikamijimachou The ferry from Takehara takes about half an hour, and by the time the hull slows into the dock at垂水港, the scale of things has already shifted.
- ootakeshi The smell of the sea comes before the view of it.
- onomichishi The ferry crossing between Onomichi and Mukōjima takes only minutes, but the shift in scale is immediate — the hillside town behind you, a narrow strait ahead, and then the open geometry of the Seto Inland Sea spreading outward toward the islands.
- kaitachou The Saiyokaidō once passed through here, and something of that old transit logic still holds.
- kitahiroshimachou Snow accumulates here at depths that reshape the landscape — Kitahiroshima sits in the Chugoku Mountains of northwestern Hiroshima Prefecture, where the Japan Sea climate presses cold air inland and winter becomes the town's dominant season.
- kumanochou Buses from Hiroshima's city center pass through the mountains and drop into a basin ringed on all sides by low hills — no train line reaches here, which gives Kumano-cho its particular quiet.
- kureshi Steel and salt air define the approach to Kure.
- sakachou The Seto Inland Sea sits at the edge of your view almost as soon as you step off at Saka Station, the ridge of Moriyama rising sharply behind the town and the flat coastal strip between them holding everything — houses, roads, a library tucked into the station's south exit, a shopping center, a hospital.
- shoubarashi Somewhere along the JR Geibi Line, the mountains close in and the valleys deepen, and by the time the train reaches Shobara, the air outside feels different — colder, quieter, carrying the particular weight of the Chugoku Mountains in winter.
- jinsekikougenchou Limestone dissolves slowly, and the gorge at Teishakukyō is the long result — walls of karst rock above a river that splits and rejoins, carved over time into natural bridges and overhangs.
- serachou The plateau sits well above the coastal lowlands, cool enough that the air feels different the moment you leave the expressway at Sera IC.
- takeharashi Salt made this town.
- hatsukaichishi The ferry from Miyajima-guchi crosses a narrow stretch of the Seto Inland Sea in minutes, and the torii of Itsukushima Jinja rises from the water before you've quite settled your bag.
- higashihiroshimashi The white-walled kura of Saijo line the street in a particular silence on ordinary weekdays — red-tiled rooflines, *namako*-patterned plaster, the faint residue of fermentation in the air.
- hiroshimashi The trams of Hiroshima Dentetsu run on their own unhurried schedule, threading through the city's flat delta grid from JR Hiroshima Station toward Kamiyacho and Hatchobori, where the commercial pulse of the city concentrates.
- fukuyamashi Steel and sea define the air around Fukuyama Station — the faint industrial haze over the port, the Seto Inland Sea glinting somewhere beyond the freight lines.
- fuchuushi Excavations are still ongoing in the Tsuji district and around Kinryūji, where archaeologists continue to uncover the administrative core of the ancient Bingo provincial capital.
- fuchuuchou Toward the end of the JR Sanyo Line, the platform at Mukainada Station empties and fills in tight waves — workers in company-issued jackets, cyclists locking up beside the exit, the low hum of a factory town moving through its morning.
- miharashi The Shinkansen stops here, and so do container ships.
- miyoshishi Fog pools in the Miyoshi basin before dawn, thickening along the banks where the tributaries of the Gonokawa converge.