Matsukura Castle: Difference between revisions

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{{Castle
{{Castle
|English Name=
|English Name=Matsukura Castle
 
|Japanese Name=松倉城
 
|Romaji Name=Matsukura-jo
 
|Castle Type=Mountaintop
 
|Castle Condition=Ruins only
Matsukura Castle
|Historical Period=Pre Edo Period
|Japanese Name=
|Features=stone walls
松倉城
|Prefecture=Gifu Prefecture
|Romaji Name=
|GPSLocation=36.12617, 137.23397
Matsukura-jo
|Notes=They just built castles that were most effective for them at the time given the resources at hand and the purpose of the castle being built. No one said “let’s build X type castle here”. For the sengoku builders, they had smaller territories and had to work with what was at hand, the best most suitable high ground more often than not. Early Sengoku castle battles were more about who could outlast the other longer. Build a castle that’s difficult to attack and wait out the siege, which will last until planting or harvesting season begins and all the attacking warriors trickle back to their farms. The “castle” was just a place you fled to in times of siege, thus higher ground, and not a year round base of operations. It was Nobunaga-Hideyoshi who started changing this by employing a larger professional warrior class that could attack a castle in the off season or through the seasons. As territories grew and warring became year round, more practical bases on smaller mountains or somewhat down the mountains were more frequently used. These are easier to attack than higher mountains so we build up the fortifications, stonework, bigger walls/gates, and so forth. Again, we’re talking about a spectrum of castle types and the needs and area also dictate the type of castle.  
|Alternate Names=
 
|Founder=
 
|Year Founded=
 
|Castle Type=
Mountaintop
|Castle Condition=
Ruins only
|Designations=
 
|Historical Period=
Pre Edo Period
|Main Keep Structure=
 
|Year Reconstructed=
 
|Artifacts=
 
 
|Features=
stone walls
|Access=
 
 
|Visitor Information=
 
 
|Time Required=
 
|City=
 
|Prefecture=
Gifu Prefecture
|Notes=
 
 
They just built castles that were most effective for them at the time given the resources at hand and the purpose of the castle being built. No one said “let’s build X type castle here”. For the sengoku builders, they had smaller territories and had to work with what was at hand, the best most suitable high ground more often than not. Early Sengoku castle battles were more about who could outlast the other longer. Build a castle that’s difficult to attack and wait out the siege, which will last until planting or harvesting season begins and all the attacking warriors trickle back to their farms. The “castle” was just a place you fled to in times of siege, thus higher ground, and not a year round base of operations. It was Nobunaga-Hideyoshi who started changing this by employing a larger professional warrior class that could attack a castle in the off season or through the seasons. As territories grew and warring became year round, more practical bases on smaller mountains or somewhat down the mountains were more frequently used. These are easier to attack than higher mountains so we build up the fortifications, stonework, bigger walls/gates, and so forth. Again, we’re talking about a spectrum of castle types and the needs and area also dictate the type of castle.  
   
   
  If you look at Nobunaga’s main bases they go from Kiyosu (very flat) -> Komaki (small mountain) -> Gifu (huge mountain) -> Azuchi (medium mountain). Then if you look to the Late Hojo, whose base is at Odawara, Odawara Castle itself is fairly flat with the tenshu sitting on a small hillock. Good place for living and administering, but the entire border of their lands is a string of high mountaintop castles that form a defensive perimeter.
  If you look at Nobunaga’s main bases they go from Kiyosu (very flat) -> Komaki (small mountain) -> Gifu (huge mountain) -> Azuchi (medium mountain). Then if you look to the Late Hojo, whose base is at Odawara, Odawara Castle itself is fairly flat with the tenshu sitting on a small hillock. Good place for living and administering, but the entire border of their lands is a string of high mountaintop castles that form a defensive perimeter.
 
|Year Visited=Viewer Contributed
 
|rating_average=0.0
|History=
|castleElev=833
 
|ekiLatLng=36.14069,137.251396
|ekiElev=574
 
|elevChange=259
|Visits=
|adminRating=3
 
|oldID=290
|Japanese Notes=
 
 
|Year Visited=
 
|Website=
 
|rating_average=
0.0
|castleElev=
833
|ekiLatLng=
36.14069,137.251396
|ekiElev=
574
|elevChange=
259
|kamon=
 
|kamonFam=
 
|adminRating=
3
|oldID=
290
|GPSLocation=
36.126167956568715,137.23397146999548
}}
}}

Revision as of 12:33, 18 July 2017

They just built castles that were most effective for them at the time given the resources at hand and the purpose of the castle being built. No one said “let’s build X type castle here”. For the sengoku builders, they had smaller territories and had to work with what was at hand, the best most suita

00Matsukura.png



Field Notes

They just built castles that were most effective for them at the time given the resources at hand and the purpose of the castle being built. No one said “let’s build X type castle here”. For the sengoku builders, they had smaller territories and had to work with what was at hand, the best most suitable high ground more often than not. Early Sengoku castle battles were more about who could outlast the other longer. Build a castle that’s difficult to attack and wait out the siege, which will last until planting or harvesting season begins and all the attacking warriors trickle back to their farms. The “castle” was just a place you fled to in times of siege, thus higher ground, and not a year round base of operations. It was Nobunaga-Hideyoshi who started changing this by employing a larger professional warrior class that could attack a castle in the off season or through the seasons. As territories grew and warring became year round, more practical bases on smaller mountains or somewhat down the mountains were more frequently used. These are easier to attack than higher mountains so we build up the fortifications, stonework, bigger walls/gates, and so forth. Again, we’re talking about a spectrum of castle types and the needs and area also dictate the type of castle.

If you look at Nobunaga’s main bases they go from Kiyosu (very flat) -> Komaki (small mountain) -> Gifu (huge mountain) -> Azuchi (medium mountain). Then if you look to the Late Hojo, whose base is at Odawara, Odawara Castle itself is fairly flat with the tenshu sitting on a small hillock. Good place for living and administering, but the entire border of their lands is a string of high mountaintop castles that form a defensive perimeter.




Gallery
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Castle Profile
English Name Matsukura Castle
Japanese Name 松倉城
Founder
Year Founded
Castle Type Mountaintop
Castle Condition Ruins only
Historical Period Pre Edo Period
Features stone walls
Visitor Information
Access
Hours
Time Required
Location , Gifu Prefecture
Coordinates 36.12617, 137.23397
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Admin
Added to Jcastle
Admin Year Visited Viewer Contributed


3.00
(one vote)
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