Asakura Akizukijo Castle Town Walk
Akizuki, a small post town in the mountains of Asakura City, contains one of Fukuoka's most complete and least-photographed examples of Edo-period townscape. The castle β built in 1203 and destroyed in the Meiji land reforms β survives only as a stone gate (nagayamon) at the end of a long stone-paved approach. That approach, lined with cedar-bark walls and old merchant houses, is the destination.
The town is at its most famous in spring, when the cedar-lined approach (called Sugi no Baba) is covered in fallen cherry blossoms β a photographic effect so perfect that it looks artificial. In autumn, the maple-lined approach to the Akizuki Shrine produces a tunnel of orange and red that is one of Kyushu's finest foliage walks. The population is 500 people; annual visitors number in the hundreds of thousands in peak season.
Getting There
Access Information
Insider Guide
Unlock Insider Tips
Booking secrets, hidden viewpoints, and local contacts β exclusively for Premium members.
Get Premium Β· from $5/monthBook Your Stay Nearby
Find accommodation close to Asakura Akizukijo Castle Town Walk on these trusted booking platforms:
More in Fukuoka
Shin-Shin β Soul of Hakata Ramen
Shin-Shin (γγΒ·γγ) is what Hakata ramen should taste like β clean, milky tonkotsu broth with none of the pungent funk thaβ¦
Nakasu Yatai β Open-Air Food Stall Alley
Fukuoka is the last city in Japan where yatai β traditional wheeled food stalls β survive as a genuine part of urban lifβ¦
Yame Gyokuro β Japan's Finest Green Tea
Yame, a hillside city 50 km south of Fukuoka, produces Japan's most sought-after gyokuro β a shade-grown green tea so prβ¦