Kamei Castle: Difference between revisions

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{{Castle
{{Castle
|English Name=
|English Name=Kamei Castle
 
|Japanese Name=亀居城
 
|Romaji Name=Kamei-jo
 
|Alternate Names=Ogata-jo
 
|Founder=Fukushima Hoki
Kamei Castle
|Year Founded=1608
|Japanese Name=
|Castle Type=Hilltop
亀居城
|Castle Condition=Ruins only
|Romaji Name=
|Designations=Local Historic Site
Kamei-jo
|Historical Period=Edo Period
|Alternate Names=
|Features=stone walls
Ogata-jo
|Access=Kuba Sta. (JR Sanyo Line) 30 min walk or 10 min bus
|Founder=
|Visitor Information=park, open any time
Fukushima Hoki
|Time Required=90 mins
|Year Founded=
|Website=http://www.city.otake.hiroshima.jp/ch_kanko/kanko2.html#kamei
1608
|City=Otake
|Castle Type=
|Prefecture=Hiroshima Prefecture
Hilltop
|Notes=The stone walls were much more impressive and the site was more extensive than I had expected. This is definitely a castle worth visiting. Some of the walls have obviously been rebuilt and look in a cleaner condition while some walls look more like they've been untouched giving them a more ancient castle ruins atmosphere. Some of the rebuilt wall structures however don't quite look faithful to the original to me. For example the convenient road alongside the main baileys and the stone walls along the road up. When the buildings were demolished or moved in 1611, the site was abandoned. Much of the walls fell into ruin and were buried over the years, but continuous surveys and studies have rebuilt the castle to what you see today.
|Castle Condition=
|History=Fukushima Masanori was awarded Aki and Bingo (present day Hiroshima Prefecture), former regions ruled by the Mori Clan, after the Battle of Sekigahara. Kikkawa Hiroie built Iwakuni Castle in Suou (present day eastern Yamaguchi Prefecture) in 1601, so Fukushima was ordered by Tokugawa Ieyasu to construct a castle nearby to defend Aki (present day western Hiroshima Prefecture) against possible Mori incursions. It was one of the satellite castles built to protect Hiroshima Castle. Other ones were constructed in Miyoshi, Tojo, Mihara, Kannabe, and Tomo. Construction of Kamei Castle in Ogata began in 1603 under Fukushima’s nephew, Fukushima Hoki. He died a year before it was completed in 1608. Yamada Koemon and Mori Sasuke became the lords of the castle after its completion. Kamei Castle acted as defensive gateway into Aki from Suou, and it also protected and defended the sea lanes between the coast and Itsukushima (island where present day Miyajima Shrine is located). <p>This castle had eleven baileys: Honmaru, Ninomaru, Sannoumaru, Arinomaru, Nashinomaru, Matsunomaru, Nagoyamaru, Junomaru, Tsumenomaru, Kagaminomaru, and Myokenmaru. The first eight baileys listed were spread out in a line on a small hill, 88m above sea-level at its highest point. This fortress also had a three-storey castle keep and a port in the castle town at the base of the castle. The castle had a short military life and was decommissioned in 1611 after Tokugawa realized that the Mori Clan posed no real military threat. It was called Kamei Castle because of the shape of the terrain that the castle was built on. It was said to look like a turtle lying on its stomach.</p>
Ruins only
|Year Visited=2018
|Designations=
|AddedJcastle=2012
Local Historic Site
|Visits=November 9, 2018
|Historical Period=
|GPSLocation=34.24059, 132.21646
Edo Period
|Contributor=Eric
|Main Keep Structure=
|rating_average=1.83
 
|castleElev=69
|Year Reconstructed=
|ekiLatLng=34.255398,132.228189
 
|ekiElev=3
|Artifacts=
|elevChange=66
 
|kamon=fukushima.jpg
|kamonFam=Fukushima
 
|adminRating=1
|Features=
|oldID=209
stone walls
|Access=
 
 
Kuba Sta. (JR Sanyo Line) 30 min walk or 10 min bus
 
 
|Visitor Information=
 
Free and open castle park
 
|Time Required=
 
|City=
Otake, Hiroshima Pref.
|Prefecture=
Hiroshima Prefecture
|Notes=
 
 
Take the JR Train to Kuba Station (玖波駅) and then walk 30 minutes mainly along Route 2. Kamei Castle Ruin is in Kamei Park (亀居公園). This castle ruin could be better signposted and maintained. It was terribly overgrown in mid-summer when I visited.
 
 
|History=
 
 
Fukushima Masanori was awarded Aki and Bingo (present day Hiroshima Prefecture), former regions ruled by the Mori Clan, after the Battle of Sekigahara. Kikkawa Hiroie built Iwakuni Castle in Suou (present day eastern Yamaguchi Prefecture) in 1601, so Fukushima was ordered by Tokugawa Ieyasu to construct a castle nearby to defend Aki (present day western Hiroshima Prefecture) against possible Mori incursions. It was one of the satellite castles built to protect Hiroshima Castle. Other ones were constructed in Miyoshi, Tojo, Mihara, Kannabe, and Tomo. Construction of Kamei Castle in Ogata began in 1603 under Fukushima’s nephew, Fukushima Hoki. He died a year before it was completed in 1608. Yamada Koemon and Mori Sasuke became the lords of the castle after its completion. Kamei Castle acted as defensive gateway into Aki from Suou, and it also protected and defended the sea lanes between the coast and Itsukushima (island where present day Miyajima Shrine is located). <p>This castle had eleven baileys: Honmaru, Ninomaru, Sannoumaru, Arinomaru, Nashinomaru, Matsunomaru, Nagoyamaru, Junomaru, Tsumenomaru, Kagaminomaru, and Myokenmaru. The first eight baileys listed were spread out in a line on a small hill, 88m above sea-level at its highest point. This fortress also had a three-storey castle keep and a port in the castle town at the base of the castle. The castle had a short military life and was decommissioned in 1611 after Tokugawa realized that the Mori Clan posed no real military threat. It was called Kamei Castle because of the shape of the terrain that the castle was built on. It was said to look like a turtle lying on its stomach.</p>
 
 
|Visits=
Viewer Donated
|Japanese Notes=
 
 
|Year Visited=
Viewer Contributed
|Website=
 
 
http://www.city.otake.hiroshima.jp/ch_kanko/kanko2.html#kamei
 
 
|rating_average=
1.83
|castleElev=
69
|ekiLatLng=
34.255398,132.228189
|ekiElev=
3
|elevChange=
66
|kamon=
fukushima.jpg
|kamonFam=
Fukushima
|adminRating=
1
|oldID=
209
|GPSLocation=
34.24058807791969,132.21645712852478
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 22:18, 12 November 2019

The stone walls were much more impressive and the site was more extensive than I had expected. This is definitely a castle worth visiting. Some of the walls have obviously been rebuilt and look in a cleaner condition while some walls look more like they've been untouched giving them a more ancient c

Kamei33.jpg

History
Fukushima Masanori was awarded Aki and Bingo (present day Hiroshima Prefecture), former regions ruled by the Mori Clan, after the Battle of Sekigahara. Kikkawa Hiroie built Iwakuni Castle in Suou (present day eastern Yamaguchi Prefecture) in 1601, so Fukushima was ordered by Tokugawa Ieyasu to construct a castle nearby to defend Aki (present day western Hiroshima Prefecture) against possible Mori incursions. It was one of the satellite castles built to protect Hiroshima Castle. Other ones were constructed in Miyoshi, Tojo, Mihara, Kannabe, and Tomo. Construction of Kamei Castle in Ogata began in 1603 under Fukushima’s nephew, Fukushima Hoki. He died a year before it was completed in 1608. Yamada Koemon and Mori Sasuke became the lords of the castle after its completion. Kamei Castle acted as defensive gateway into Aki from Suou, and it also protected and defended the sea lanes between the coast and Itsukushima (island where present day Miyajima Shrine is located).

This castle had eleven baileys: Honmaru, Ninomaru, Sannoumaru, Arinomaru, Nashinomaru, Matsunomaru, Nagoyamaru, Junomaru, Tsumenomaru, Kagaminomaru, and Myokenmaru. The first eight baileys listed were spread out in a line on a small hill, 88m above sea-level at its highest point. This fortress also had a three-storey castle keep and a port in the castle town at the base of the castle. The castle had a short military life and was decommissioned in 1611 after Tokugawa realized that the Mori Clan posed no real military threat. It was called Kamei Castle because of the shape of the terrain that the castle was built on. It was said to look like a turtle lying on its stomach.


Field Notes

The stone walls were much more impressive and the site was more extensive than I had expected. This is definitely a castle worth visiting. Some of the walls have obviously been rebuilt and look in a cleaner condition while some walls look more like they've been untouched giving them a more ancient castle ruins atmosphere. Some of the rebuilt wall structures however don't quite look faithful to the original to me. For example the convenient road alongside the main baileys and the stone walls along the road up. When the buildings were demolished or moved in 1611, the site was abandoned. Much of the walls fell into ruin and were buried over the years, but continuous surveys and studies have rebuilt the castle to what you see today.


Loading map...


Gallery
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls
  • Stone walls
  • Stone walls
  • Stone walls
  • Sannomaru Bailey
  • Stone walls
  • Stone walls
  • Stone walls
  • Ninomaru entrance
  • Ninomaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls seen from the Tsumenomaru Bailey
  • Tsumenomaru stonewalls (may not be original)
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru and Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru entrance
  • Honmaru entrance
  • Honmaru entrance form the Tsurui-no-dan
  • Honmaru entrance
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Looking from the Honmaru
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Looking from the Honmaru
  • Honmaru stone walls
  • Ninomaru entrance
  • stone walls
  • Ninomaru entrance
  • stone walls
  • Ninomaru Bailey
  • Sannomaru Bailey
  • Sannomaru Bailey
  • Arinomaru stone walls
  • stone walls
  • stone walls
  • Nashinomaru Bailey
  • stone walls
  • stone walls
  • Matsunomaru stone walls
  • Nagoya bailey stone wall remains
  • Nagoya bailey stone wall remains
  • Nagoya bailey
  • Nagoya bailey stone wall remains
  • Entrance to the Nagoya Bailey
  • Entrance to the Nagoya Bailey
  • Entrance to the Nagoya Bailey
  • Entrance to the Nagoya Bailey
  • View from the Honmaru just before it rains
  • Map


Castle Profile
English Name Kamei Castle
Japanese Name 亀居城
Alternate Names Ogata-jo
Founder Fukushima Hoki
Year Founded 1608
Castle Type Hilltop
Castle Condition Ruins only
Designations Local Historic Site
Historical Period Edo Period
Features stone walls
Visitor Information
Access Kuba Sta. (JR Sanyo Line) 30 min walk or 10 min bus
Hours park, open any time
Time Required 90 mins
URL Castle Website
Location Otake, Hiroshima Prefecture
Coordinates 34.24059, 132.21646
Loading map...
Admin
Added to Jcastle 2012
Contributor Eric
Admin Year Visited 2018
Admin Visits November 9, 2018


2.25
(4 votes)
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