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Arita Porcelain — Where Japanese Ceramics Were Born

Published: Jun 1, 2026
Updated: Jun 1, 2026
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Arita Porcelain — Where Japanese Ceramics Were Born

Arita is the birthplace of Japanese porcelain — in 1616, the Korean potter Yi Sam-pyeong discovered white clay suitable for true porcelain production at Izumiyama hill, establishing the Arita kilns that would supply the imperial courts of Europe through the Dutch East India Company for 200 years. The town still has 100+ active kilns producing Arita-yaki, and the Arita Porcelain Park recreates a German Meissen-style baroque building (the Europeans' model from Arita export) in unexpected juxtaposition with rice paddies.

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Getting There

Access Information

Arita Town (Nishimatsuura County). JR Kyudai Main Line to Arita Station (90 min from Hakata). Main pottery street is 15-minute walk from station. Kiln visits generally free; showroom hours vary.

Insider Guide

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**The Izumiyama quarry:** The original clay source (Izumiyama) is still visible behind a fence at the hilltop — a white scar in the earth that has been supplying Arita kilns for 400 years. Access via

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