Rikan Castle: Difference between revisions

From Jcastle.info
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 15: Line 15:
|City=Sayo-cho
|City=Sayo-cho
|Prefecture=Hyogo Prefecture
|Prefecture=Hyogo Prefecture
|Notes=Best to be reached by car. Take route 443 from Hirafuku station towards north east direction. After an underpass of the freeway look out to the right for a bridge. It will take you to an unsealed road. The road requires 4WD when wet. Bush parking space available. At the end of the unsealed road is a steep walking track.
|Notes=Rikan Castle sustained heavy damage a few years ago during a typhoon. It is mostly off limits now and can only be approached on a guided tour. You can sign up for tours with the [https://sayoyamajiro.wordpress.com Sayo Township]. 3000 yen per person and a minimum of 3 people per tour.
 
Photos and profile by user Ucu_Maksudi.
|History=Bessho Atsunori, a relative of the Akamatsu clan, built this castle in 1349 to help protect their main castle, Shirohata Castle, in the north. This remained an Akamatsu alligned castle for more than 200 years.  In 1578, the lord of the castle, Bessho Nagaharu, was attacked by Amago Katsuhisa and Yamanaka Yukimori because he opposed the Oda.  That same year, the Amago were attacked by the Mouri and Rikan Castle came under control of Ukita Naoie, a vassal of the Mouri.
|History=Bessho Atsunori, a relative of the Akamatsu clan, built this castle in 1349 to help protect their main castle, Shirohata Castle, in the north. This remained an Akamatsu alligned castle for more than 200 years.  In 1578, the lord of the castle, Bessho Nagaharu, was attacked by Amago Katsuhisa and Yamanaka Yukimori because he opposed the Oda.  That same year, the Amago were attacked by the Mouri and Rikan Castle came under control of Ukita Naoie, a vassal of the Mouri.


Line 25: Line 23:
|Visits=Viewer Donated
|Visits=Viewer Donated
|GPSLocation=35.04686, 134.37927
|GPSLocation=35.04686, 134.37927
|Contributor=Ucu_Maksudi
|rating_average=0.0
|rating_average=0.0
|castleElev=293
|castleElev=293

Latest revision as of 12:09, 15 December 2024

Rikan Castle sustained heavy damage a few years ago during a typhoon. It is mostly off limits now and can only be approached on a guided tour. You can sign up for tours with the Sayo Township. 3000 yen per person and a minimum of 3 people per tour.

Rikan6.jpg

History

Bessho Atsunori, a relative of the Akamatsu clan, built this castle in 1349 to help protect their main castle, Shirohata Castle, in the north. This remained an Akamatsu alligned castle for more than 200 years. In 1578, the lord of the castle, Bessho Nagaharu, was attacked by Amago Katsuhisa and Yamanaka Yukimori because he opposed the Oda. That same year, the Amago were attacked by the Mouri and Rikan Castle came under control of Ukita Naoie, a vassal of the Mouri.

After the Battle of Sekigahara (1600) the castle came under the control of the Ikeda Terumasa. Terumasa's nephew Yoshiyuki renovated the castle including building a 3 level main keep. The stone walls you see today also date from this renovation. The main keep was too grand and the castle too strongly built that fearing retaliation from the Tokugawa Bakufu, Ikeda Terumasa removed Yoshiyuki and dismantled the main keep and other significant structures from the castle. In 1615 Terumasa's sixth son Teruoki became lord of the castle until he took over Ako Castle in 1631. Rikan Castle was also decommissioned at this time.


Field Notes

Rikan Castle sustained heavy damage a few years ago during a typhoon. It is mostly off limits now and can only be approached on a guided tour. You can sign up for tours with the Sayo Township. 3000 yen per person and a minimum of 3 people per tour.




Gallery
  • Rikan6.jpg
  • Rikan1.jpg
  • Rikan2.jpg
  • Rikan3.jpg
  • Rikan4.jpg
  • Rikan5.jpg
  • Rikan7.jpg
  • Rikan8.jpg
  • Rikan9.jpg
  • Rikan10.jpg
  • Rikan11.jpg
  • Rikan12.jpg


Castle Profile
English Name Rikan Castle
Japanese Name 利神城
Alternate Names Untotsu-jo, Hirafuku-jo, Kumotsuki-jo
Founder Bessho Atsunori
Year Founded 1349
Castle Type Mountaintop
Castle Condition Ruins only
Historical Period Pre Edo Period
Features trenches, stone walls
Visitor Information
Access Hirafuku Station (Chizu Line); and long walk (~60 mins) or car (unsealed road) and short walk (10-15mins)
Hours 400m walk from the end of the unsealed road. Around 10-15 minutes of steep track.
Time Required
URL Castle Website
Location Sayo-cho, Hyogo Prefecture
Coordinates 35.04686, 134.37927
Loading map...
Admin
Added to Jcastle 2013
Contributor Ucu_Maksudi
Admin Year Visited Viewer Contributed
Admin Visits Viewer Donated


0.00
(0 votes)
Loading comments...