Search by property
From Jcastle.info
This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- File:Izunagahama16.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Izunagahama8.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Inukai3.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Yato18.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Osakaibaraki23.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Osakaibaraki32.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Ushiku21.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Yumurayama6.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Amidagamine11.jpg + (First Bailey)
- File:Osakaibaraki24.jpg + (First Bailey entrance)
- File:Osakaibaraki3.jpg + (First Bailey trench)
- File:Osakaibaraki26.jpg + (First Bailey trench)
- File:Ashigara8.jpg + (First bailey)
- File:Imai13.jpg + (First bailey trench)
- File:Washio21.jpg + (First big horikiri trench)
- File:Igaueno11.jpg + (First floor of the main keep. They have done a good job reconstructing this in wood and the museum houses a nice collection of artifacts including Todo Takatora's famous helmet.)
- File:Karakai16.jpg + (First horikiri trench along the trail)
- File:Karakai15.jpg + (First large bailey along the trail)
- File:Shinpu23.jpg + (First masugata you encounter)
- File:Matsuida17.jpg + (First of several consecutive trenches)
- File:Imai11.jpg + (First or main bailey)
- File:Inawashiro15.jpg + (First stone steps after the gate)
- File:Asonuma7.jpg + (Flag at the castle site)
- Flatland + (Flatland Castles, also known as Plains Cas … Flatland Castles, also known as Plains Castles, are built on lower elevation plains. They are not able to use elevation and mountains to their advantage to create natural defenses so they rely more on rivers, waterways and a complex network of trenches or water filled moats to protect the castle. In the Edo Period when provincial lords were limited to one castle, they often built a Flatland or Hilltop castle that could be used for both administration and defense. "Lake Castles" or "Ocean Castles", which sit on a large body of water and make extensive use of it in their defensive design, could be considered sub-categories of the Flatland Castle.red sub-categories of the Flatland Castle.)
- File:Tage31.jpg + (Flattened area around the yokobori trench)
- File:Kasugayama14.jpg + (Flower patch. This is where the flowers and herbs for the temples were grown.)
- File:Akita21.jpg + (Flushable outhouse)
- File:Akita24.jpg + (Flushable outhouse)
- Next 100 Castles + (Following on the success of the original [[Top 100 Castles | Top 100 most famous castles]] … Following on the success of the original [[Top 100 Castles | Top 100 most famous castles]], published in 2006 by the Japan Castle Foundation, the same organization has released a list of the Next 100 Most Famous Castles. I'm a little disappointed that they kept the same criteria insisting that every prefecture be represented and no more than 4 for any one prefecture. Some very good castles have surely been looked over while some unworthy and mostly unknown castles have been included.</br>The castles documented on this site are linked below. documented on this site are linked below.)
- File:Yoshidakoriyama1.jpg + (Foot of the mountain near the entrance)
- File:Kirarazaka22.jpg + (For in the road from the previous map, go right for Ichijoji-jo)
- File:Kanegasaki sakamoto13.jpg + (Formal Entrance)
- File:Kakunodate ishiguro10.jpg + (Formal entrance)
- File:Onozaki residence4.jpeg + (Formal entrance)
- File:Tatebayashi tayama katai4.jpg + (Formal entrance)
- File:Kubota38.jpg + (Formal entranceway to the house)
- File:Kubota46.jpg + (Formal entranceway to the house)
- File:Kakunodate aoyagi32.jpg + (Formal room)
- File:Kakunodate aoyagi14.jpg + (Formal room (zashiki))
- File:Kakunodate aoyagi15.jpg + (Formal room and garden)
- File:Annaka21.jpg + (Formal zashiki room)
- File:Kasugayama1.jpg + (Former Guard House site. You can see a rise on the right of the picture. From here there was a gate across the road. This is one of the first sites if you begin from the Ote-do Road.)
- File:Nanbata27.jpg + (Former Osawa's house)
- File:Nanbata20.jpg + (Former Osawa's house. This house of a village master was relocated here.)
- File:Oohara2.jpg + (Former Water Moat and Earthen Rampart Eastern Side)
- File:Fushimi1.jpg + (Former boat docks)
- File:Nanbata25.jpg + (Former gate of the Suzuki home. It is a nagayamon style gate.)
- File:Himejikarametenew22.jpg + (Former gun powder storage)
- File:Hasedo30.jpg + (Former site of a water moat)
- File:Oohara1.jpg + (Former water moats)
- File:Takasaki8.jpg + (Former waterway between the Honmaru and Ninomaru)
- Fortified Manor + (Fortified Manors (居館, kyokan) are the fort … Fortified Manors (居館, kyokan) are the fortified residences of powerful local leaders and samurai. They are typically simple rectangular fortifications with a moat and earthen embankment, or sometimes stone walls. In Japanese they are often called Yashiki or Yakata. Many of these Fortified Manors are from the Heian and Kamakura Periods, before castles enlarged and developed to include quarters for samurai and other powerful local lords. In the Sengoku Period you often see the pair of a fortified manor at the foot of the mountain for everyday use and a mountaintop castle for use in times of unrest. [[Kazurayama Castle]] is one such good example and so is the [[Sanada Palace]] / [[Sanadahonjo Castle]] pair.</br></br>Some might ask if such Fortified Manors are really castles. The definition of "castle" in Japanese is actually vague. It is simply a fortification to help protect from one's enemies. This includes everything from the earliest fortified villages ([[Yoshinogari]]) to primarily political centers ([[Taga Castle]]) to smoke signal towers (noroshidai) or even fortified towns like Kamakura which itself was called Kamakura Castle at one point. The military purpose and defensive fortifications are what separates these from ordinary homes. This distinction is also separates them from [[Samurai Homes]] of the Edo Period, which were strictly controlled by local lords and did not have castle-like defenses such as embankments or trenches.</br></br>There is a frequently used Japanese castle term 城館 (jokan), which includes the characters for both castle (城) and fortified manors (館) that clearly covers both. There are also a few yakata in the [[Top 100 Castles]] and [[Next 100 Castles]].astles]].)