Sacred Site · Izumo

Yomotsu Hirasaka

黄泉比良坂 Yomotsu Hirasaka

The traditional location of the slope between the world of the living and Yomi, the land of the dead. After seeing Izanami in her decayed state, Izanagi fled here and sealed the underworld behind him with the Chibiki-no-Iwa, the Thousand-Pulling Rock. The site is undramatic — three boulders, a wooden plaque, a quiet road — which is part of why it is worth visiting.

Type Sacred Site
Region Izumo
Time Required 30 minutes
Last Updated May 2026

The Kojiki returns again and again to acts of separation. Husband and wife. Sister and brother. The visible and the invisible. The largest of these — the one that comes earliest in the text and underwrites every smaller separation after it — is the separation of the living from the dead.

That separation happens here.

The return from Yomi

Izanami dies in childbirth — the god of fire burns her from the inside out as he is born — and descends to Yomi-no-Kuni, the land of the dead. Izanagi, unable to accept this, follows her. He finds her in the darkness of Yomi. He sees her — and she has already begun to rot. Maggots cover her body. Eight thunder gods writhe in her flesh.

Izanagi runs. Izanami, enraged at having been seen this way, sends the army of Yomi after him. He flees through the underworld with the dead pursuing. He throws his hair-comb behind him; it sprouts as bamboo, slowing the pursuit. He throws peaches, the food of the dead, at his pursuers; they fall away.

At last he reaches the boundary — the slope between Yomi and the world above. He climbs. He arrives at the surface. He turns. And then, with all his strength, he pushes a great boulder — the Chibiki-no-Iwa, the Thousand-Pulling Rock — into the mouth of the underworld and seals it.

Izanami, on the other side, declares: “I will kill a thousand of your people every day.” Izanagi replies: “Then I will cause fifteen hundred to be born.” The separation is fixed. Death is real. Life continues.

The actual slope

The traditional identification of this slope is Ifuya-zaka, a quiet, narrow stretch of road in the Higashi-Izumo district of Matsue. The site is unsignposted from the highway. You park on a gravel pull-off. You walk fifty metres up a slight rise. And you arrive at three large boulders set in a row, half-overgrown, marked only by a wooden plaque.

These are said to be the Chibiki-no-Iwa — or the place where it stood. The scale is not what you expect. The boulders are large but not monumental. The site does not announce itself. It is, in a way, the most undramatic mythologically charged place in the whole Kojiki Trail.

The strangeness of standing here

What is unusual about Yomotsu Hirasaka is not the visible site. It is the claim of the visible site. This is, by tradition, the literal boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead. The Kojiki does not place this boundary in a metaphor or in a distant region. It places it on a slope in Izumo, with a few rocks, that you can walk to in your normal shoes.

Stand there for a minute. The road is quiet. The trees overhead are not unusual. The rocks are rocks. And yet, by the text of the country’s oldest book, the dead are on the other side.

Editor’s note

This is the strangest stop on the Izumo trail, and arguably the one most worth taking time at. There is no shrine to photograph, no shimenawa to admire, no famous tree. There are three rocks and an old story. Bring patience. The site rewards the visitor who is willing to spend ten quiet minutes doing nothing in particular.

For the Traveler

Practical information

Address
Ifuya, Higashi-Izumo-cho, Matsue, Shimane 699-0101, Japan
住所
〒699-0101 島根県松江市東出雲町揖屋
Hours
Open at all hours; no facilities on site
Admission
Free
Time Required
30 minutes
Best Season
Year-round
Access
About 25 minutes by car from JR Matsue Station, or 10 minutes by car from JR Ifuya Station (Sanin Main Line). The site is unsignposted from the main road; look for a small wooden marker and a gravel pull-off. The boulders are 50 metres up a quiet rise.