41 new castle profiles from ART
ART, the dauntless castle explorer, has added 41 new castle profiles from his travels. If you haven't seen his Japanese Castles facebook page, check it out as well. All these photos and more have been posted there at some point. He ha
41 New Castle Profiles From ART
2019/11/09
ART, the dauntless castle explorer, has added 41 new castle profiles from his travels. If you haven't seen his Japanese Castles facebook page, check it out as well. All these photos and more have been posted there at some point.
He has also kindly added new or renewed photos for these castles.
- Iino-Taira Castle
- Hanamaki Castle
- Iinuma Castle
- Owari Ohno Castle
- Yunagaya Jin'ya
- Saimyoji Castle
- Funaoka Castle
- Suginome Castle
- Soma Nakamura Castle
- Ogoe Castle
- Kawawada Castle
- Ishigami Castle
- Kurobane Castle
- Mibu Castle
New Castles
Asahi Castle (Owari) / Owari-Asahijō
Baba Yashiki / 馬場屋敷
Ema Yakata / 江馬館
Fukushima Castle / 福島城
Hanakuma Castle / 花隈城
Hodarakuji Castle / 補陀楽寺城
Iwaki Taira Castle / 磐城平城
Kameyama Castle (Azumi) / 安曇亀山城
Kasane Castle / 重ね城
I went to Kasane Castle because when I was about to leave Takei Castle I saw a sign tied to a tree pointing to it. I had no idea about it but curiosity drove me on. I’d already merrily expended energy running around Takeijō so I had to break a couple of times on the way, but then I also have the habit of running up steeper slopes. It’s a form of laziness really.
I was about to give up when I saw the mountain summit because it seemed the ridge would never end but just get steeper. However, at that time I saw another sign which had fallen down indicating that the castle was close by. The whole far side of the mountain, which Kasanejō is atop of, is cordoned off, creating a colourful but bedraggled barrier hemming in the site.
Essentially the ruin is an undulating formation of baileys perforated by horikiri, trenches that dissect the ridge. Some of the trails were strewn with collapsed trees. I was able to identify the main bailey and multiple horikiri but the long abandoned and foreboding atmosphere of the mount was probably the most memorable part of my visit.
Since the climb from Takeijō is time-consuming and arduous, it probably isn’t worth visiting Kasanejō unless one feels a sense of duty to visit the latter as part of the former.Kita Kumai Castle / 北熊井城
Each bailey is separated by trenches, some very deep, and each trench slopes off into a chute on eitherside of the castle. To the south a significant trench also flanks the length of the castle, separating it from a depression which leads to a stream, and here at the point between baileys the trenches form intersections; there are at least three of these cross-shaped trenches.
Between the honmaru and the first eastern bailey is a tripple trench system. The most westerly trench is the most shallow and feels more intimately connected with the honmaru. The middle trench is the deepest and most awesome. The most easterly is also quite deep. The deepest and widest trench at the entire castle is between the honmaru and the first western bailey. It's interesting that on one side of the honmaru Kumaijō's builders developed a series of three trenches and on the other they opted for digging out one really big one. The only baileys without a trench seperating them are the second and third west baileys, which merely have an embankment between.Kojima Castle (Hida) / 飛騨小島城
Koka-Aoki Castle /
[[|200px|link=Koka-Aoki Castle]]
Komatsu Castle / 小松城
Koromo Castle / 拳母城
Koromojō's main part consists of an ishigaki segment with a turret atop. The stone blocks used in the rampart segment show signs of being quarried and carved traditionally, which makes me think that the yaguradai (masonry base) is preserved from the Edo period, or perhaps later restored using original materials. It is next to a modern stone wall, however.
The turret is not original and was reconstructed in 1978 (English Wikipedia says '1959', which I think is a mistake, and Japanese Wikipedia says '1977'; I’m using '1978' because that’s what the sign at the site says). The yagura was not open when I visited.
Now part of a park, the site is quite small, although the original castle was more expansive. A depiction of the original castle is shown at the site.
Next to the castle is a large tea pavilion called Yūjitsutei which was originally built as a shoin (drawing room) and chashitsu (tea room) at Terabejō, also in Toyota. Terabejō became a jin’ya in 1618. The shoin was relocated to a temple, Ryūjuin, in 1892, before being acquired by the city in 1977, and moved to the castle. So, this is a goten (palace) remnant, but not one native to Koromojō.
Original profile by ART (2019), history updated and some new photos added by Eric (2020).Magome Castle / 馬籠城
Matsukura Castle / 松倉城
The ninomaru (second bailey) is by now denuded of its stone ramparts but nonetheless its contours are readily appreciated from the yaguradai and honmaru. We climbed up from the sannomaru (third bailey). There is parking just below there.
The short trail starts with a warning about bears and an empty bucket with kosh attached. You whack it to make a lot of noise so as to forewarn any bears which may be around of your presence. Bears really hate it when you sneak up on them, as they are a secretive bunch. I took to this saftey precaution with the enthusiasm of a child permitted to break rules, hammering on the bucket loudly and shouting - we didn't have bear bells. Matsukurajō is also accessed via a trail starting from the Hida no Sato outdoor folkhome museum.
The lower extremities of Matsukurajō or an attached kyokan may extend into that park, as I found what looked like deformed dorui (earth-piled ramparts) there. The castle mount looms over the relocated farmhouses.Minakuchi Okayama Castle / 水口岡山城
Minami Kumai Castle / 南熊井城
Murai Koya Castle / 村井小屋館
Myogi Castle / 妙義城
Nagashima Castle / 長島城
Nagisa Castle / 渚城
Nakahara Yakata / 中原館
Nata Castle / 那谷城
Nishiyama Castle (Azumi) / 安曇西山城
Odayama Castle (Aizu) / 会津小田山城
Oguchi Castle / 小口城
This site is quite remarkable in that it possesses a tall miyagura (watchtower). The layout of the castle is known from historical schematics, and the miyagura is very much like something we might expect to see at a Sengoku period site. However, things get a bit curious from here. The miyagura stands on a platform of ishigaki (piled stones) which is clearly a modern addition to the site. On the stone-clad ramparts a stucco-earthen wall has been erected with yasama (loop holes). The site is accessed via a Kōraimon-type gate and traditional bridge. So this site now seems to be combination of a Sengoku period castle and an Edo period castle, even though the castle only existed throughout the Sengoku period.
The gaps between the miyagura and the dobei wall are particularly jarring, but otherwise I appreciated the spectacle. I also noticed that the openings built into the wooden panels coating the stairwell which ascends the watchtower face in-ward toward the castle. I’m not sure of the utility of this: one would expect the shutters to face-outward toward any potential attacker. Views from the top of the watchtower are impressive.
Oguchijō is located roughly between Komakijō, Iwakurajō and Inuyamajō. I was able to see Komakijō from here as an odd protrusion on a distant hilltop. Zooming in with my camera revealed the vaguely yagura-shaped dot more clearly, but a clear view was obstructed by a pylon. If I had realised how close I was to other sites, I would’ve looked for other castles as well; maybe Inuyamajō can also be spied from the tower, since it’s closest.
The remains of a sunken pit furnace can be found at Oguchijō, indicating that is used to possess a blacksmith.
Note: The name of the castle and modern township are similar but different.Ryusenji Castle / 龍泉寺城
Sekidousan Castle / 石動山城
- Ōmiyabō, a vast temple ruin, is the reason I came here, and the main reason anyone should visit, even castle fans...
Sukegawakaibou Castle / 助川海防城
Takaharasuwa Castle / 高原諏訪城
Takao Castle / 高尾城
Takayama Castle (Gifu) /
[[|200px|link=Takayama Castle (Gifu)]]
Takei Castle / 武居城
I was very happy with Takeijō. For a small site there are a variety of different features and ruins. Whilst some parts were difficult to access, most of the ruin was well sign-posted with information (only Japanese). Because it’s hard to photograph the various trenches and baileys, I have used the on-site map to mark on what is where in the corner of each photo showing a specific feature.
Takeijō features three integral baileys: ninokuruwa (second bailey), sannokuruwa (third bailey), and shukuruwa (lord’s bailey / main bailey), and sub-baileys, called koshi-kuruwa (hip baileys) and obi-kuruwa (ring bailey). The obi-kuruwa is particularly fun because it starts at the foot of the shukuruwa and wraps near all the way around it before ascending to the entrance of the main bailey. Trenches include tatebori (climbing moats), which streak the mountain as though a giant comb was scraped down it, yokobori (side moats), horikiri (trenches which cut through the mountain ridges to create redoubts), and nijūhorikiri (double trenches), which I also call twin trenches.
By the way, the map is mislabelled. The blue is in fact horikiri, and the yellow are the connected tatebori and yokobori (but otherwise the map is nice and useful). There is an identifiable segment of dorui (rampart of piled earth rising above the perimeter of the bailey) in the ninokuruwa.
The castle ruin is situated on the slope of a mountain. The entire hillside is surrounded by an electrified fence to prevent wild animals from entering the village of Asahi (an on-going problem for the locals apparently because there are also remains of boar pits and other medieval defences in the village). The fence behind the kabukimon, which marks the entrance to the castle, is intimidating, but can be unlocked and entered. Luckily I had my gloves on to open the lock because it was spitting sparks due to the electrification. And so the castle is well-defended even today! On even ground at the foot of the mountain / castle is a park area with a tea house called Wadōan.Tenjin'yama Castle / 天神山城
Yamazaki Castle / 山崎城
For such a well known site, I was a little disappointed in this one because there were not as many clear ruins as I had expected to see. Around the honmaru you can find a few stones remaining from the original stonework and a few more if you pick around in the wooded sides of the bailey. There is also a bailey with a well and some slight earthen embankments and several side baileys. The most clear embankments are those of the honmaru and the bailey with the well. Looking at the map there should have been a tatedorui (vertical running earthen embankment) from the honmaru but with a lot of similar looking ground it was a bit difficult to make it out. The highlight of this castle is definitely the giant trench around the Northeast side that is not often covered in other materials about the castle. If you visit Yamazaki Castle, it would could be good to plan in some of the other attractions related to the battle with Akechi Mitsuhide like his encampment at the Igenoyama Kofun and Shoryuji Castle. I got a late start due to a long train stoppage and then some unexpected rain dumped on me on the way back to the station so I called it quits after the castle. (Eric 2022)
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