Via Nostalgia
  • Chat
  • Trips
  • Explore
  • Saved
  • Themes
  • Routes
  • Essays
  • Books
  • Works
  • Heritage
  • Lists
  • Subscribe
Appearance
Sign In
Via Nostalgia
Goshono Site 1
Goshono Site 2
Goshono Site 3
Goshono Site 4
Goshono Site 5
© Wikimedia Commons contributors / CC BY-SA
UNESCO WHCCulturalInscribed 20211632-009

Goshono Site

Component of Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan

Overview

The property consists of 17 archaeological sites in the southern part of Hokkaido Island and northern Tohoku in geographical settings ranging from mountains and hills to plains and lowlands, from inland bays to lakes, and rivers. They bear a unique testimony to the development over some 10,000 years of the pre-agricultural yet sedentary Jomon culture and its complex spiritual belief system and rituals. It attests to the emergence, development, maturity and adaptability to environmental changes of a sedentary hunter-fisher-gatherer society which developed from about 13,000 BCE. Expressions of Jomon spirituality were given tangible form in objects such as lacquered pots, clay tablets with the impression of feet, the famous goggle eyed dogu figurines, as well as in ritual places including earthworks and large stone circles reaching diameters of more than 50 metres. The serial property testifies to the rare and very early development of pre-agricultural sedentism from emergence to maturity.

About Goshono Site

Goshono ruins is a middle Jōmon period archaeological site in the town of Ichinohe, Iwate Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. Discovered during the construction of an industrial park in 1989, the area was designated a National Historic Site in 1993 by the Japanese government.

Read more on Wikipedia

Selection Criteria

(iii)(v)

Details

Countries
Japan
ISO Codes
JP
Coordinates
40.1981, 141.3058
View on UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan← All UNESCO World Heritage Sites
Stay Nearby

Goshono Site

Attractions & Tickets

Goshono Site

Getting Here

Goshono Site