The site of Makimuku was first introduced by Minoru Doi in 1937 as the "Ohta Site" in "Yamato Shi". Before it was called by its present name, it was known to the academic world as the "Ota Site" and "Katsuyama Site", and was recognized by researchers as one of a group of small
sites, and did not attract any particular attention However, a plan to build prefectural housing and a primary school to promote the employment of coal mine leavers was brought up, which led to a preliminary survey by
Archaeological Institute of Kashihara to carry out a preliminary survey. As a result, a canal-like structure with a width of 5m, a depth of 1m, and a total length of more than 200m was found, and local Man'yōshū researcher Yoshinobu Yoshioka and others suggested that it might be the remains of the Makimukugawa River, which appears in the ''
Man'yōshū''. In 2011, more than six types of fish bones and scales were found at the site, including
red seabream,
horsefish,
mackerel and
common carp. They also announced that they had found over a thousand animal bones, including those of wild boars, deer, and ducks.
Main Detected Remains It is about 10 times larger than the Karako-Kagi site and larger than the
Taga Castle site, which was a major military base in the Tohoku region. There are also traces of urban planning throughout the site. • Two huge linear
waterways, 5m wide and 1m deep, revetted with sheet piles and known as the "North Ditch" and "South Ditch". :* South ditch: extends from the Makimuki River near the tip of the protruding part of the Hashihaka Tomb in a northwesterly direction towards the present-day Garoshi Elementary School. The source of the water is the circumference moat of the Hashihaka Tomb. Behind the moat is the Kunizu Shrine, which reaches the present-day Makimuki River. :* North Ditch: extends from the former Anashi River in the north-east towards the south-west. The source of the water is the old Makimuki River. : The confluence of the two ditches is located on the grounds of the Makimuku Elementary School, and is estimated to be 2,600m long. It connects with the
Yamato River, which in turn connects to the distant open sea. •
Spring water was found at the bottom, and the interior is divided into three main layers. About 150 irregularly shaped circular pits with one side protruding, about 3m in diameter and 1.5m deep, were found. • The remains of dugout pillar buildings and the remains of accompanying buildings (a building of the first half of the Kofun period with a floor space of about 23 m2 in 2×3 rooms, the remains of a collapsed house and wooden products with black lacquered arcs, a small house of 1×1 rooms and a total pillar building of 2×2 rooms and wooden products with black lacquered arcs, a stone monument of the former site of the Tamaki Palace in Tamaki, and the existence of a palace residence are suspected. In addition, 17 dugout pillar buildings were found.) •
Pit-house : However, there were not many pit dwellings, and it is likely that the buildings were built on stilts. • V-shaped compartmental ditch with arcaded panels, earthworks and fence rows • Remains of a water-conducting facility (possibly a palace drainage facility) •
Ritual site (a jasper jade, a cusp, a tubular jade, a small glass jade, and pottery from the second half of the 4th century were excavated from the traditional site of Emperor Keiko's palace in Anashi-Doyodo district) • Iron-making site –
Metalsmith site with
Tsukushi-shaped blowpipe. It is estimated to date from the late 4th century, when iron was smelted in the Kinai region. • Fences around the settlement. • Ancient burial mounds scattered around the site (Makimuku Kofun Group) There is also the possibility that many buried tombs, which cannot be seen above ground, are buried underground. File:Makimuku Site, Tatemono-B.jpg|Tsuji Area Building B File:Makimuku Site, Tatemono-C.jpg|Tsuji Area Building C File:Makimuku Site, Tatemono-D.jpg|Tsuji Area Building D
Main excavated artifacts •
Earthenwares from the late
Yayoi period to the early
Kofun period were excavated, and the
Yayoi potteries and
Haji pottery. According to them, the five periods are Yayoi pottery style V (Makimuku 1), Shonai pottery (Makimuku 2, Makimuku 3 and Makimuku 4) and Nururu I (Makimuku 5). However, the dates are based on the C14 dating method, which may be more than 100 years old. • Vermilion-painted chicken-shaped wooden product • A wooden product known as an 'arc-shaped circular plate', with a design combining straight and curved lines, believed to have its origins in the Kibi region. • Drawstring bag made of silk However, silk was not produced in the Kinai region until the 4th century. • Tiled earthenware (Pottery fragments were excavated in 1996 (Heisei 8). Analyses of the composition of the clay components confirmed in 2001 that the pottery was unique in Japan, and that it was made using techniques from the
Korean Peninsula. • A miniature boat • Wooden arrowheads • Iwami-type shield-shaped wooden wares • a large number of imported pottery (exotic pottery). However, there is a lack of conclusive evidence to date the site, such as the absence of bronze mirrors, swords, jade beads and iron objects, so it is not possible to say definitively that this was the site of the Yamatai Kingdom.
Artifacts have been unearthed from all over Japan, but most of them were made in
Ise Province, which is adjacent to
Yamato Province and has had a close relationship with the country since ancient times.
Ise Province, which was adjacent to
Yamato Province and had close relations with
Ise Bay, and
Owari Province, which is located to the east across
Ise Bay. In addition to the pottery brought in, there is a large amount of pottery that was made in Yamato but is said to have regional characteristics, and the proportion of such pottery is higher at
Ritual-related sites (30% of all pottery excavated at many sites). In addition, although these exotic pottery and artifacts are found from
Kyushu to
Kanto and the
Sea of Japan side, there is very little pottery of Kyushu or Korean origin, suggesting that this site had little trade with the continent. File:纒向遺跡出土 土器群.JPG|Group of excavated earthenware
The main tombs of the Makimuku site •
Makimuku Ishizuka Kofun •
Makimuku Katsuyama Kofun •
Makimuku Yazuka Kofun • •
Hokenoyama Kofun •
Hashihaka Kofun A peculiar site • Although the site is said to be a large settlement, the remains of an inhabited settlement have not been found. All that can be seen today are ritual buildings, earthen mounds, ritual implements such as arcane discs and chicken-shaped wooden products, and large and small ditches (canals) protected by cypress sheet piles for distribution. Many scholars believe that the site was not a residential area, but rather a place for frequent gatherings of people and goods, and for rituals to
Mount Miwa around the
Hashihaka Kofun. • In the Tsuji/Torii-mae area, a 2 × 3 m long
digout pillar building and a row of fences running east–west to the south of it have been found; in the Ota Minami Tobizuka area, the remains of a collapsed house have been found; and in the Makinochi Ietsura area, a small 1 × 1 m long house and a 2 × 2 m long building with full columns have been found. In addition, 17 dugout pillar buildings have been found in the Ota Meguri area, and pit dwelling remains have been found in the Higashida Kakinoki and Ota Tobizuka areas. • According to Hironobu Ishino, this is "a large settlement site that suddenly appeared at the end of the 2nd century and suddenly disappeared in the middle of the 4th century".
Excavation Report •
Ishino Hironobu,
Sekikawa Naokoh, "Garments," Sakurai City Board of Education, September 1976. •
Sekikawa, Naokoh and Matsunaga, Hiroaki, "Summary of Excavations at the Garoshi Site," The Archaeological Institute of Kashihara, 1984. • Naokoh Sekikawa and Hiroaki Matsunaga, "An Overview of the Excavation of the Garoshi Archaeological Site," The Archaeological Institute of Kashihara, Nara Prefecture, 1985. • "Report on the Excavation of the Makimuku Site", Sakurai Municipal Archaeological Center, Excavation Report 28, 2007. • "Makimuku Ruins", Sakurai City Board of Education, Education Division, 1981. • "Sakurai City Excavation Report by the National Treasury Subsidy in 2015", Sakurai Municipal Archaeological Heritage Excavation Report 46, 2017. == Characteristics of the site ==