Anjou Jin'ya: Difference between revisions
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|City=Anjō  | |City=Anjō  | ||
|Prefecture=Aichi Prefecture  | |Prefecture=Aichi Prefecture  | ||
|Notes=Anjō-jin'ya is a hatamoto (bannerman) jin'ya site in urban Anjō. The site is now mostly housing, but there is a small field on a short bluff with altars and an explanatory board about the site; it is a locally designated historic site. I   | |Notes=Anjō-jin'ya is a hatamoto (bannerman) jin'ya site in urban Anjō. The site is now mostly housing, but there is a small field on a short bluff with altars and an explanatory board about the site; it is a locally designated historic site. I visited here as part of a tour of the Anshō trinity sites, the others being [[Ansho Castle]] (medieval), and [[Anshouko Castle]] (classical to medieval era) (this one: jin'ya = proto-modern era). No ruins remain.  | ||
|History=Anjō-jin'ya was hatamoto jin'ya established in 1698 by Hisanaga Nobutoyo to govern a fiefdom valued at 4,354 koku. The jin'ya was in place all the way up until 1871 and the abolition of feudalism in Japan.  | |History=Anjō-jin'ya was hatamoto jin'ya established in 1698 by Hisanaga Nobutoyo to govern a fiefdom valued at 4,354 koku. The jin'ya was in place all the way up until 1871 and the abolition of feudalism in Japan.  | ||
|Year Visited=Viewer Contributed  | |Year Visited=Viewer Contributed  | ||
Latest revision as of 08:57, 17 July 2024
Anjō-jin'ya is a hatamoto (bannerman) jin'ya site in urban Anjō. The site is now mostly housing, but there is a small field on a short bluff with altars and an explanatory board about the site; it is a locally designated historic site. I visited here as part of a tour of the Anshō trinity sites, the
History
Anjō-jin'ya was hatamoto jin'ya established in 1698 by Hisanaga Nobutoyo to govern a fiefdom valued at 4,354 koku. The jin'ya was in place all the way up until 1871 and the abolition of feudalism in Japan.
Field Notes
Anjō-jin'ya is a hatamoto (bannerman) jin'ya site in urban Anjō. The site is now mostly housing, but there is a small field on a short bluff with altars and an explanatory board about the site; it is a locally designated historic site. I visited here as part of a tour of the Anshō trinity sites, the others being Ansho Castle (medieval), and Anshouko Castle (classical to medieval era) (this one: jin'ya = proto-modern era). No ruins remain.
| Castle Profile | |
|---|---|
| English Name | Anjou Jin'ya | 
| Japanese Name | 安城陣屋 | 
| Alternate Names | Anshō-jin'ya | 
| Founder | Hisanaga Nobutoyo | 
| Year Founded | 1698 | 
| Castle Type | Flatland | 
| Castle Condition | Ruins only | 
| Designations | Local Historic Site | 
| Historical Period | Edo Period | 
| Features | |
| Visitor Information | |
| Access | Minami-Anjō Station on the Meitetsu-Nishio Line; 10 minute walk | 
| Hours | 24/7 free; park | 
| Time Required | 15 minutes | 
| URL | Castle Website | 
| Location | Anjō, Aichi Prefecture | 
| Coordinates | 34.94703, 137.09431 | 
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| Admin | |
| Added to Jcastle | 2023 | 
| Contributor | ART | 
| Admin Year Visited | Viewer Contributed | 
| Friends of JCastle | |
| Jōkaku Shashin Kiroku | |
| Umoreta Kojō | |
| Rekishi Tanbōki | |
| Jōkaku Hōrōki | |
| Jōkakuzukan | |



