Shimabara Castle: Difference between revisions
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{{Castle | {{Castle | ||
|English Name= | |English Name=Shimabara Castle | ||
|Japanese Name=島原城 | |||
|Romaji Name=shimabara-jo | |||
|Alternate Names=Moritake-jo | |||
|Founder=Matsukura Shigemasa | |||
Shimabara Castle | |Year Founded=1616 | ||
|Japanese Name= | |Castle Type=Flatland | ||
島原城 | |Castle Condition=Reconstructed main keep | ||
|Romaji Name= | |Designations=Top 100 Castles | ||
shimabara-jo | |Historical Period=Edo Period | ||
|Alternate Names= | |Main Keep Structure=5 levels, 5 stories | ||
Moritake-jo | |Year Reconstructed=1964 (concrete) | ||
|Founder= | |Features=main keep, turrets, water moats, stone walls, walls | ||
Matsukura Shigemasa | |Access=Shimabara Sta. (Shimabara Line); 10 min, walk | ||
|Year Founded= | |Website=http://www.shimabarajou.jp/index.cgi | ||
1616 | |City=Shimabara | ||
|Castle Type= | |Prefecture=Nagasaki Prefecture | ||
Flatland | |Notes=Not personally visited. All pictures donated by Raffi. | ||
|Castle Condition= | |History=The Arima clan, who were Christian lords, ruled over the Southern part of the Shimabara Peninsula from Hinoe Castle and Hara Castle. The Tokugawa had originally been tolerant of Christianity but from 1614 they changed policy and expelled the missionaries. At this time, the lord of Shimabara, Arima Naozumi, was also relocated and Matsukura Shigemasa took his place. Matsukura strictly enforced the prohibition against Christianity. | ||
Reconstructed main keep | |||
|Designations= | |||
Top 100 Castles | |||
|Historical Period= | |||
Edo Period | |||
|Main Keep Structure= | |||
5 levels, 5 stories | |||
|Year Reconstructed= | |||
1964 (concrete) | |||
|Features= | |||
stone walls | |||
|Access= | |||
| | |||
|City= | |||
Shimabara | |||
|Prefecture= | |||
Nagasaki Prefecture | |||
|Notes= | |||
Not personally visited. All pictures donated by Raffi. | |||
|History= | |||
The Arima clan, who were Christian lords, ruled over the Southern part of the Shimabara Peninsula from Hinoe Castle and Hara Castle. The Tokugawa had originally been tolerant of Christianity but from 1614 they changed policy and expelled the missionaries. At this time, the lord of Shimabara, Arima Naozumi, was also relocated and Matsukura Shigemasa took his place. Matsukura strictly enforced the prohibition against Christianity. | |||
<p> | <p> | ||
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<p> | <p> | ||
Shimabara Castle had several different ruling families until the Meiji Period when it was dissassembled. </p> | Shimabara Castle had several different ruling families until the Meiji Period when it was dissassembled. </p> | ||
|Year Visited=Viewer Contributed | |||
|AddedJcastle=2006 | |||
|GPSLocation=32.78921, 130.36724 | |||
|rating_average=3.11 | |||
|castleElev=22 | |||
|ekiLatLng=32.790593,130.370605 | |||
|ekiElev=4 | |||
|elevChange=18 | |||
|Year Visited= | |kamon=toda.jpg | ||
Viewer Contributed | |kamonFam=Matsukura | ||
| | |adminRating=4 | ||
|oldID=73 | |||
|rating_average= | |||
3.11 | |||
|castleElev= | |||
22 | |||
|ekiLatLng= | |||
32.790593,130.370605 | |||
|ekiElev= | |||
4 | |||
|elevChange= | |||
18 | |||
|kamon= | |||
toda.jpg | |||
|kamonFam= | |||
Matsukura | |||
|adminRating= | |||
4 | |||
|oldID= | |||
73 | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 21:57, 7 October 2017
Not personally visited. All pictures donated by Raffi.
History
The Arima clan, who were Christian lords, ruled over the Southern part of the Shimabara Peninsula from Hinoe Castle and Hara Castle. The Tokugawa had originally been tolerant of Christianity but from 1614 they changed policy and expelled the missionaries. At this time, the lord of Shimabara, Arima Naozumi, was also relocated and Matsukura Shigemasa took his place. Matsukura strictly enforced the prohibition against Christianity.
Instead of making use of the Arima's castles, Matsukura began construction of the new Shimabara Castle and heavily taxed the peasants to pay for it. This oppression of the peasants is what led to the Shimabara Rebellion in the winter of 1637-1638. In an interesting twist of events, the rebels made use of Hara Castle which had simply been abandoned years earlier by Matsukura. The buildings were gone but the moats and walls remained so with little effort the rebels had a fully defensible stronghold.
Shimabara Castle had several different ruling families until the Meiji Period when it was dissassembled.
Field Notes
Not personally visited. All pictures donated by Raffi.
Castle Profile | |
---|---|
English Name | Shimabara Castle |
Japanese Name | 島原城 |
Alternate Names | Moritake-jo |
Founder | Matsukura Shigemasa |
Year Founded | 1616 |
Castle Type | Flatland |
Castle Condition | Reconstructed main keep |
Designations | Top 100 Castles |
Historical Period | Edo Period |
Main Keep Structure | 5 levels, 5 stories |
Year Reconstructed | 1964 (concrete) |
Features | main keep, turrets, water moats, stone walls, walls |
Visitor Information | |
Access | Shimabara Sta. (Shimabara Line); 10 min, walk |
Hours | |
Time Required | |
URL | Castle Website |
Location | Shimabara, Nagasaki Prefecture |
Coordinates | 32.78921, 130.36724 |
|
|
Admin | |
Added to Jcastle | 2006 |
Admin Year Visited | Viewer Contributed |