Yashima's flat-topped lava plateau was the stage for one of Japan's most storied samurai battles in 1185. Today it offers sweeping panoramas over the Seto Inland Sea alongside an open-air village museum of historic Shikoku farmhouses — a rare double of drama and beauty.
What to expect
The drive up to Yashima Plateau reveals a panorama that stops conversation — the Seto Inland Sea spreads below you, scattered with pine-clad islands, exactly as the samurai would have seen it. Your guide recounts the pivotal 1185 sea battle and points out the coves where boats were drawn up. Yashima-ji temple, one of the 88 sacred sites of the Shikoku Pilgrimage, crowns the plateau with quiet gravitas. Below, Shikoku Mura is an open-air collection of 33 historic buildings — thatched farmhouses, a kabuki stage, a vine suspension bridge — relocated from across the island and arranged in a forested hillside village that feels genuinely inhabited. End with a stop at the plateau's famous udon restaurant for a bowl framed by the view.
Good to know
Yashima is 30 minutes by taxi from Takamatsu Port (approx. JPY 2,500 one way) or reachable by the Kotoden Yashima line (a charming vintage tram). The plateau can be breezy — a light layer is wise. Shikoku Mura opens at 08:30. Allow 3–4 hours for both sites combined.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Takamatsu — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.