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Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival)

The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope

Nada no Kenka Matsuri
(Nada Fighting Festival)

Photography and Text by Thaddeus Pope

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Home >> Photo Essays >> Matsuri >> Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival)

Each October in Shirahama, the Nada no Kenka Matsuri turns a shrine festival into ritual combat, as massive wooden palanquins crash together again and again in a bruising contest of devotion, rivalry and local pride.

By mid-afternoon the hillside is full. Families, neighbours and invited guests press into the steep natural bowl below Mt Otabiyama, looking down on a square that, for most of the year, is only a place. On these two October days it becomes an arena. The drums begin before the collisions do, sounding from inside the yatai, the ornately decorated festival palanquins, like thunder trapped in wood. Below, men in village colours bend beneath lacquered weight, testing their footing, shifting their shoulders, waiting for the moment to drive forward.

Then the first impact comes.

It is not graceful. It is not meant to be. Wood meets wood with a force that, for a moment, seems to hush the crowd before the shouting resumes. The yatai lurch, recover, swing back into line. Men lean hard into the beams to steady them. Inside the swaying structures, the drummers do not stop. From the hillside, the scene can look like uproar. Up close, it is something far more exacting: violence contained by ritual.

For two days each October, the seaside district of Shirahama, on the edge of Himeji in Hyogo Prefecture, hosts the Nada no Kenka Matsuri, one of Japan’s most charged autumn festivals. More than 100,000 people come to watch three mikoshi, or portable shrines, and seven yatai, the ornate floats of the old villages, carried, blessed, paraded, collided and hauled uphill in a celebration that is at once sacred observance and village contest. The clashes give the festival its fame, but they are only the most visible part of what is renewed here each year. The festival begins with blessing and procession before building towards the clashes of the second day. The deeper work is communal: the old districts making themselves felt again through rank, ritual and the body.


Seven Villages, One Shrine

The festival belongs to Matsubara Hachiman Shrine, but it also belongs to the seven old villages around it: Higashiyama, Kiba, Matsubara, Yaka, Mega, Usazaki and Nakamura. Each sends its own yatai into the festival. Each carries its own pride. For the villages, this is not a pageant imported for outsiders, nor an annual performance staged solely for the camera. It is a rite in which standing is tested in public and carried home afterwards.

That matters because Nada no Kenka Matsuri can look, at first glance, like pure spectacle. It is easy to be seized by the crowd, the shouting, the drumbeat, the richly worked floats pitching towards one another with alarming force. But the festival’s power lies in the order beneath the noise. Everything has rank, sequence and inherited form. The yatai enter the shrine in a prescribed order. Roles are assigned. Duties rotate. The men who carry the weight know where they stand in relation not only to one another but also to the district whose honour they bear on their shoulders.

The festival draws its force from tension. The noise is real, but so is the order beneath it. The villages come together by setting themselves against one another. The gods are honoured through strain, rhythm and collision. Local identity here becomes public and physical.


The Eve of the Festival

The first day, yoimiya – the eve of the festival – begins not with combat but with purification, procession and display. Before the crowds at Otabiyama swell and before the clashes become the centre of attention, the yatai move through the town in neri-dashi, a formal public procession at a pace slow enough for their workmanship to be properly seen. This is the day on which the festival puts its splendour on display.

That splendour is hard won. The yatai are ornate, costly structures, layered with silk curtains, metal ornament and carved woodwork. Phoenixes, dragons and tigers appear among the motifs, creatures of protection and power worked into beams and panels that will, by the following day, be thrust into violent motion. Seen in procession, they are ceremonial objects first: not blunt instruments, but vessels of labour, expense and local pride. Even unfinished palanquins – the plain wooden shiraki yatai still undergoing the long process by which they are prepared for full public life – may receive blessings at the shrine.

When the seven yatai arrive at Matsubara Hachiman Shrine, they enter one by one for miyairi, the formal shrine entry. As they pass through the gate, the upper sections are removed in a gesture of respect for the sacred precinct, something like the taking off of a hat before entering a place of reverence. The chant rises again and again – ‘Yoyasa, Yoyasa’ – a rallying cry heard over the two days as rhythm, signal and challenge. A Shinto priest blesses the palanquins and the men who carry them in a rite of purification. The movement is measured, the mood ceremonial. At this stage, the festival is still gathering itself.

And yet even on the first day, the collisions to come are already taking shape. After the blessings, there are mock clashes – warm-up collisions that rehearse the larger ones to come. A shishi-mai, or lion dance, follows. There is more parade than combat, more ceremony than contest. Beneath it all lies the knowledge that the festival is moving towards impact.

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What the Men Carry

The yatai may dominate the eye, but the true burden of the festival is borne by the men underneath them. They carry not only weight, though there is plenty of that, but also tempo, risk and expectation. The palanquins must be kept upright, kept moving, driven forward at the right moment and steadied when the force of contact threatens to tip the whole thing sideways. The work demands stamina, coordination and nerve. What looks from the hillside like a single surge is, on the ground, an exacting collective act.

Their dress makes the order visible. Each village has its own colour, marked in headbands and armbands. Fundoshi sit tight to the body. Jika-tabi grip the ground. The clothing is traditional, but it is also practical: attire for men who will spend hours bearing wood on bone, sweat on skin, strain in every step. Younger boys may appear in lighter roles, holding lanterns and taking part at the edge of the action, but the carrying itself belongs to men of fighting age. The festival is still organised around ideas of strength, duty and endurance that belong, here, to men.

Inside the yatai, taiko drummers ride through the turbulence. Their role is among the festival’s most arresting contradictions. While the structure pitches, jolts and collides around them, they are expected to hold the beat. The sound they make is immense, almost elemental. Yet its purpose here is not mere atmosphere. It gives form to motion. It keeps order inside upheaval. The deeper the yatai lurch, the more necessary the rhythm becomes.

Alongside the seven yatai are the three mikoshi, lighter than the larger floats but more sacred in their charge. The distinction matters. The yatai represent the villages; the mikoshi bear the gods. Local belief does not separate sanctity from uproar as neatly as an outsider might expect. The clashes are not a break from ritual. They are part of its force. The gods are not imagined as delicate presences requiring stillness. They are carried through shouting, jostling, weight and impact.


Cold Water at Dawn

By the second day, honmiya – the festival’s main day – the tone has changed. If the first day displays beauty, the second tests endurance. Before dawn, the mikoshi and the men who will bear them go to the sea. In the Harima-nada waters they undergo a cold purification rite, washing themselves and their burden in misogi – ritual purification with water – before the day’s more punishing work begins.

The responsibility for tending the mikoshi falls each year to the village serving as neri-ban, the district charged with attending to them. That rotating duty gives the festival another layer of order. Rivalry matters here, but so does service. There is prestige in carrying one’s own yatai into battle, but there is also honour in the year when a village must care for the mikoshi and prepare them for the movement of the gods.

The sea rite strips the festival briefly of pageantry. At the shore, there is no embroidered curtain to admire, no amphitheatre to frame the scene, no crowd yet massed on the hillside. What remains is cold water, bare skin, wooden weight and the sense that before anything can be displayed it must first be purified. It is a severe kind of beginning.


First the Mikoshi

Once the mikoshi have been purified, the procession returns to the shrine for blessing, then moves on towards the open ground where the crowd is waiting. The first to enter are the three mikoshi. Their bearers are assigned by age: the youngest men carry the lightest, those in the middle years take the next, and the heaviest burden falls to the oldest group. Even here, as anticipation thickens, the festival remains structured by rank and sequence.

Then comes mikoshi-awase, the ritual clashing of the mikoshi.

If the yatai clashes are the festival’s public signature, the mikoshi collisions are its sacred core, a prelude to the larger clashes to come. The shrines are supported and steadied as the men drive them into one another in a punishing ritual contest. There is nothing casual about it. The movement has the volatility of struggle, but it is governed by custom. What appears wild is, in fact, tightly ordered: force allowed because custom has made a place for it.

When the mikoshi fighting ends, the labour does not. They must still be taken to Mt Otabiyama, borne uphill in a difficult balancing act that becomes harder in poor weather and harder still after the strain already endured. The climb is part of the ordeal, and so is the knowledge that the day’s most famous spectacle has yet to begin.


When the Yatai Meet

The yatai-awase – the collisions between the village floats – is what sets Nada apart in the public imagination. This is the moment the crowd has been waiting for – the extended sequence in which the village floats enter the square and meet one another in clash after clash as the contests unfold.

What gives the yatai-awase its force is repetition. One clash would be dramatic. Several hours of them become something else: a test of rhythm, shoulder strength, balance, daring and pride. The yatai advance not like wheeled machines, but like living weight, their movement made possible only by the men underneath them. They surge, hesitate, swing, collide, recoil. The bearers shout, brace and recover. The drummers keep time through the shock. Every impact is both brute force and collective coordination.

What the crowd reads in these collisions is not simply damage. It is composure. Which team absorbs the blow without losing shape. Which float seems to gather itself most cleanly after the strike. Which village carries its confidence most visibly. Bragging rights matter, of course, and they will be argued over long after the day is done. But honour is measured by more than victory alone. Bearing matters. Control matters. To falter publicly is one kind of defeat. To remain upright and resolute under pressure is another kind of triumph.

The excitement can make the yatai seem almost warlike. The lurching movement of the floats, their attempt to hold course under violent impact, has invited comparisons to ships in heavy water or vessels meeting in battle. The comparison holds because the movement itself invites it: a carried structure trying to keep its course under violent impact.


What the Fighting Means

No single explanation entirely contains the festival. That is part of why it endures. Some accounts connect the clashes to martial legend, to the drama of sea crossings and ancient conflict. Others place its origins within the longer evolution of Hachiman worship and local shrine observance. The history does not resolve into one tidy founding story, and it need not. Festivals of this age and depth are rarely so simple. They accumulate meanings. They absorb local memory, religious custom and civic rivalry until each year’s performance carries several truths at once.

The collisions matter, but they do not explain themselves. Their force lies in what they hold together: devotion and bravado, sacred duty and village rivalry, inherited ritual and village pride. Here, belonging is not abstract. It is organised through rank, carried in the body and repeated in public.

That is why the beauty of the yatai matters so much. It is not decorative excess placed around the real action. It is part of the point. These are objects made to be admired before they are hurled into collision. Their craftsmanship heightens the force of what happens to them. Nothing disposable could carry the same charge. What is at stake must be valuable enough for the blow to matter.


The Climb

By the time the yatai-awase has run its course, the men carrying the floats are already spent. Shoulders are bruised, rubbed raw by weight and friction. Muscles begin to fail not from one effort but from hours of repeated strain. Yet the festival still demands more. The mikoshi and yatai must be taken uphill to the summit, where prayers are offered and the procession regathers above the town.

The climb alters the day’s meaning. From the hillside, the festival can seem almost inexhaustible, one vivid scene replacing another. On the ascent, its cost becomes clearer. The same men who, minutes before, were driving their floats into one another with all the force they could summon must now transform spectacle back into labour. There is nothing theatrical about the hill. It is simply steep, and the weight is simply there.

At the top there is a pause, a brief interval of prayer and rest. The yatai line up. The mikoshi rest. The mountain offers a different perspective, not only across the town but across the day itself. Below are the arena and the crowds; above is a quieter reaffirmation that the festival is still, at base, a shrine rite. The collisions may command attention, but prayer remains the axis around which everything turns.


Lanterns on the Way Down

By evening the light has thinned. The palanquins are illuminated with lanterns as they begin the descent, and the festival takes on one final transformation. What had been harsh in afternoon glare now glows. The same wood that absorbed the day’s shocks seems, in the falling dark, almost tender. Yet nothing essential has softened. The men are exhausted. The rivalry remains alive. The memory of each clash still hangs in the air.

Back in the arena, the yatai meet once more in a final yatai-awase as the day draws to a close. That last clash matters. The villages will carry the memory of it with them. For some there is triumph, for others the sting of coming off worse. But the deeper result of the day lies elsewhere. Every district has fulfilled its part. Every float has entered the shrine, faced the square and made the climb. Every bearer has helped renew something larger than himself: the village, the shrine, the order of the day.

Then the festival begins to loosen its grip. The crowd disperses. The hillside empties. Bruises will darken before they fade, and the yatai will need repair. Pride, whether satisfied or wounded, will be carried back into daily life. But the day has already made something public once again: that Shirahama still knows how to gather its old villages and shoulder its sacred weight together. That is why the festival endures. Year after year, a community still chooses to carry its gods, its pride and its history into the fight.

To view other photo-essays from the “Matsuri” photography project, click here.

Text and images copyright © Thaddeus Pope. All rights reserved. No unauthorised use, reproduction, distribution, or publication without prior written permission.

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Gallery

The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The amphitheatre seating is reserved for locals and the relatives of participants.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The yatai are lavishly ornamented structures, adorned with intricate decoration.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
At the gate of Matsubara Hachiman Shrine, the top of each yatai is removed as a sign of respect for the sacred precinct.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
After receiving ritual blessings, the palanquins leave Matsubara Hachiman Shrine and proceed towards Hirohata.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The unwieldy, two-tonne wooden yatai are carried from Matsubara Hachiman Shrine towards the fighting arena.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
Teamwork is essential to manoeuvre the enormous palanquins through the streets of Shirahama.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The procession from Matsubara Hachiman Shrine to Hirohata gives onlookers a chance to admire the yatai at close range.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
In the rain, the traditional split-toe boots known as jika-tabi make the yatai even harder to steer.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
As the yatai move through the streets of Shirahama, they are hoisted above head height in a display of strength and coordination.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
A shishi-mai, or lion dance.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
Though too young to carry the palanquins, younger boys take part by holding brightly coloured paper lanterns.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The yatai and their bearers fill the centre of the fighting arena.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
Two yatai collide in the fighting arena to the beat of taiko drums.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
The crowd erupts as the yatai crash together.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
As daylight fades, the yatai line up for one final clash.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
Locals cheer on the carriers from a home overlooking the fighting arena.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
After sunset, the yatai glow with lantern light before one final clash.
The Nada no Kenka Matsuri (Nada Fighting Festival) by Thaddeus Pope
Tired and bruised, the team lifts its yatai in triumph.
Thaddeus Pope Documentary Photographer Japan

Thaddeus Pope

Documentary photographer based in Japan

I’m Thaddeus Pope, a documentary photographer who also works in website and print design. I am available for assignments in Japan and internationally.

To get in touch, please use the contact form or email info@thadpope.com.

    Filed Under: Documentary, Matsuri Tagged With: Fighting Festival, Himeji, Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan, Kansai, Kenka Matsuri, Matsubara Hachiman Shrine, Matsubarahachiman Shrine, Mikoshi, Nada Fighting Festival, Nada no Kenka Matsuri, Shinto Festival, Shirahama

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