Miyagawacho

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Miyagawacho (宮川町) is one of the hanamachi (花街“flower towns”) or geisha districts in Kyoto. Miya-gawa means “Shrine River”, referring to the nickname of the Kamo River just south of Shijo. During the Gion Festival (Gion Matsuri) the mikoshi (portable shrine) of the Yasaka Shrine was purified here in the waters of the river.

Miyagawacho has three interconnected rings as its trademark, symbolizing the unity of the shrine/temples, the townspeople, and the teahouses.

What is now Miyagawacho was a place where entertainers gathered. Kabuki was performed in many small theaters on the banks of the Kamo River. Some of the teahouses were even boats that operated in the river. As Kabuki was just then developing into a mass entertainment spectacle as known today, the area was very popular and Miyagawacho quickly grew into a full town of teahouses. The association with Kabuki has gone, but the Minamiza Kabuki Theatre of Kyoto still stands on a historical spot on the east bank of the Kamo River, just below Shijo, and north of Miyagawacho. Today, Miyagawacho has its own kaburenjo or theater where geisha dances are performed.