The Mano Kofun Cluster (真野古墳群, Mano Kofun-gun) is a group of a approximately one hundred kofun burial mounds located on river terraces on the south coast of the city of Minamisōma, in Fukushima Prefecture in the southern Tōhoku region of Japan. Some 27 of the tombs have been excavated. The site has been protected by the central government as a National Historic Site since October 24, 1979.[1]

Mano Kofun Cluster
真野古墳群
Location in Japan
Location in Japan
Mano Kofun Cluster
Location in Japan
Location in Japan
Mano Kofun Cluster (Japan)
LocationMinamisōma, Fukushima, Japan
RegionTōhoku region
Coordinates37°41′49.7″N 140°57′7.2″E / 37.697139°N 140.952000°E / 37.697139; 140.952000
Altitude30 m (98 ft)
Typekofun cluster
Site notes
Excavation dates1947
Public accessYes (no facilities)

Overview

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The Mano Kofun cluster extends over an area measuring three kilometers east-west by one kilometer north-south on the south shore of the Manogawa River, and were formerly grouped into the Hachimori Kofun cluster, Ōtani Kofun cluster and Koikebara Kofun cluster, but were made into a single grouping for the purposes of securing National Historic Site status. Full-scale excavations have been conducted since 1947, and a total of 27 units have been surveyed. Two of the larger tumuli have keyhole-shaped extensions to the top and bottom, and the largest has a moat and a length of 28.5 meters. Most of the others are small empun [ja] (円墳)-style circular tumuli with diameter of about 10 meters. The internal structures of the excavated tombs exhibited a great variety, including flagstones, a box-type sarcophagus, and a pit-type stone burial chamber. The grave goods included many straight swords, horse harnesses, and jade jewelry, and stone facsimiles of everyday objects such as axes, and sickles, belonging to the late Kofun period, or the 5th to 6th centuries AD. A number of the horse fittings were of bronze and gold imported from the Asian continent. As these objects were a monopoly of the imperial court during this period, these items indicate the burial of a powerful persons with a strong connection to the Yamato state.

The site is approximately a 20-minute walk from Kashima Station on the JR East Jōban Line.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "真野古墳" (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs.
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