was a town located in the Higashimatsuura District of Saga Prefecture, Japan. à Âchi is also romanized as Ouchi and is often referred to that way in Japan. à Âchi was founded as à Âchi-mura (à Âchi-village) by the amalgamation of 16 smaller villages in 1889. It became à Âchi-town (à Âchi-chà Â) in 1935. à Âchi thus had its own town hall.
As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 8,890 and a density of 136.60 persons per kmò. The total area was 65.08 kmò.
On January 1, 2005, à Âchi, along with the towns of Chinzei, Hamatama, Hizen, Kyà «ragi and Yobuko, and the village of Kitahata (all from Higashimatsuura District), were merged into the expanded city of Karatsu. The old town hall became the à Âchi branch office of Karatsu City Hall.
à Âchi contains the Memorial Hall of Hideo Murata who was a famous Japanese rà Âkyoku and enka singer. A major attraction are the Udonoiwaya Buddhist rock carvings. The scores of images of Buddha date from as early as the 7th century. Also popular is the nearby Mikaerinotaki (Looking Back Waterfall). The Warabino terraced rice fields, said to be the highest in Japan, are located on the northern slopes of Mount Hachimandake in à Âchi.
A major event is the harvest festival, the à Âchi-kunchi. This is a smaller version of the famous Karatsu Kunchi. Beginning on the 3rd Friday of October each year the town has a weekend in which there are a series of parades, day and night, where children and adults pull two large floats and dress in period costumes with much music and lively chanting.
à Âchi was coal mining town before World War II. These days the mine site has been transformed into à Âchi park, the Saga Royal golf course, and a sports complex. à Âchi has become something of a bedroom community, with considerable new housing developments on the north side of the Kyuragi river.
The main train station, Ã Âchi Station (), is on the Karatsu Line of Kyushu Railway Company (JR Kyushu) running from Nishi-Karatsu Station in Karatsu to Kubota Station in Saga. A smaller line, part of the Chikuhi Line, runs from Yamamoto Station of Karatsu City, through Nishi-Ã Âchi Station (West-Ã Âchi) to Imari Station in Imari City, a notable pottery centre in Saga Prefecture, along with Karatsu and Arita. The next station south from Nishi-Ã Âchi is Sari Station.
à Âchi has become home to the new 21 MW Saga Ouchi Solar farm just southwest of Oshigawa in southeast à Âchi. The solar farm is one of the biggest in Kyushu and opened in April 2018.
English pages:
See also the Japanese pages:
and a map,