Sunari Festival

Date: Aug 2,2025(Sat)、Aug 3(Sun)


Sunari Festival
Sunari Festival
Sunari Festival
Sunari Festival
Sunari Festival

A 400-year-old river festival, known as the "100-Day Festival"

The Sunari Festival is held jointly by Tomiyoshi Tatehaya Jinja Shrine and Hakkensha Shrine in the town of Kanie. The first Saturday of August hosts the Evening Festival with the Morning Festival taking place the following day. The festival comprises of two parts: the Danjiri Boat River Festival and Miyoshi religious rites. Various religious ceremonies are held over 100 days or so from July to October, giving it the nickname, the "100-Day Festival".

The Sunari Festival is one of the 33 Japanese festivals added to the “Yama, Hoko, Yatai, Float Festivals in Japan” category on the Representative List of Intangible Cultural Heritage for Humanity of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in December, 2016.

The Evening Festival and the Morning Festival

Evening Festival
The Evening Festival takes place on the first Saturday of August. A Makiwara Boat is adorned with lanterns as it takes off with a musical accompaniment onboard, cruising up river to the Tennobashi Bridge. The other Miyoshibashi Bridge crossing Kanie River is too low for the boat to pass through, so the one half of it on the right bank rises up, granting the boat access.
The festival boat is adorned with 12 lit lanterns for each month of the year (13 during a leap year) on a vertical pole and 365 in a semi-circle for every day. Thirty small red lanterns are said to represent the thirty days of January.

Morning Festival
The following day features the Morning Festival, where a boat carrying representations of Izanagi no Mikoto and Izanami no Mikoto—the two founding gods of Japanese mythology—and a musical accompaniment. The boat is also decorated with plum and cherry blossom flowers as well as children beautifully dressed in traditional Japanese garb as it floats up river to Tennobashi Bridge. Long ago when the musical accompaniment finished its performance, the stems of the plum and cherry blossom flowers were snapped and thrown out to spectators, but in order to reduce any risk of injury, the branches are now given out on a first-come, first-served basis. The practice is known as "Nagehana", or "Flower Throwing", and if you decorate your house with them, you are said to be protected from lightning and summer ailments.

EVENT OVERVIEW

  • Souvenirs
  • Parking
  • Restaurant
Holding time • Evening Festival: From around 8:00 pm
• Morning Festival: From around 9:00 am
Place Area around Sunari Jinja Shrine
Location 〒497-0031
1363 Mon'yashiki-Kami, Sunari, Kanie-cho, Ama-gun, Aichi (Tomiyoshi Tatehaya Jinja Shrine and Hakkensha Shrine)
Parking Available
Phone number • 0567-95-3812 (Kanie Town Historical Folk Museum)
• 0567-58-1360 (Tourism Association KANIE)

Note: This page may not be current due to update time differences between site databases.
Should accuracy be critical, please verify this information using a direct source, whenever possible.

ACCESS

  • Access by public transport
    Access by public transport
    15-min. walk northwest from Kanie Station on the JR Kansai Main Line (board from Nagoya Station).
  • Access by car
    Access by car
    Approx. 5 min. east from Kanie Interchange on the Higashi-Meihan Expressway.

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INFORMATION ON THE SURROUNDING AREA

Tomiyoshi Tatehaya Jinja Shrine and Hakkensha ShrineKanie-Town

Tomiyoshi Tatehaya Jinja Shrine and Hakkensha Shrine
Located on the east bank of the Kanie River, the enshrined deity at Tomiyoshi Tatehaya Jin...
  • Parking

Shippo Art VillageAma-City

Shippo Art Village
Shippo ware, or <span style="font-style:italic;">Shippo-yaki</span> in Japanese and "clois...
  • Multipurpose toilet
  • Souvenirs
  • Parking
  • Restaurant

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