Ishida Jin'ya
Nothing remains of Ishida-jin’ya, a small jin’ya site in Ishida village, Shinshiro Municipality, and the site is now homes and fields. Some stone walls are built around a rural homestead, likely piled with stones from the riverbed of the Toyokawa, but they likely don’t date to the Edo period. The si
History
Ishida-jin’ya was constructed in 1648 by Suganuma Sadataka (定賞). It consisted of walls and a nagaymon (row-gatehouse).
When bannerman Suganuma Sadāki of Tanba died in 1647 without an heir, the Shogunate granted a fief of 7,000 koku to his younger brother Sadami (Shinshiro-jin’ya), and 3,000 koku to Sadataka. Sadataka became a bannerman of the Shogunate.
For Shinshiro-jin'ya see: Shinshiro Castle
Field Notes
Nothing remains of Ishida-jin’ya, a small jin’ya site in Ishida village, Shinshiro Municipality, and the site is now homes and fields. Some stone walls are built around a rural homestead, likely piled with stones from the riverbed of the Toyokawa, but they likely don’t date to the Edo period. The site sits on a terrace, and I tried to photograph its steep embankments from below, though the place was overgrown.
| Castle Profile | |
|---|---|
| English Name | Ishida Jin'ya |
| Japanese Name | 石田陣屋 |
| Founder | Suganuma Tadataka |
| Year Founded | 1648 |
| Castle Type | Flatland |
| Castle Condition | Ruins only |
| Historical Period | Edo Period |
| Features | |
| Visitor Information | |
| Access | Shinshiro Station on the Iida Line; 15 minute walk |
| Hours | Private Property |
| Time Required | 5 minutes |
| Location | Shinshiro, Aichi Prefecture |
| Coordinates | 34.89181, 137.49242 |
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| Admin | |
| Added to Jcastle | 2023 |
| Contributor | ART |
| Admin Year Visited | Viewer Contributed |
| Friends of JCastle | |
| 城郭写真記録 | |
| Jōkaku Hōrōki | |


