Walls

From Jcastle.info

Walls / 塀

This is a subtype of Features

Dobei are the white walls you commonly see at castles. They are the simplest and most inexpensive defenses available. Dobei originally lined the top of most moats, stone walls and encircled most of the baileys linking together gates and yagura. Many castles had at least one kilometer of walls and Edo Castle had more than 10km. Despite the fact that there were so many such walls during the Edo Period, if you added up all the extant walls today you would only find a little over a kilometer. The majority of extant walls are at Himeji Castle and the longest single extant section is the Nagabei at Kumamoto Castle. These walls evolved from simple structures of wooden planks nailed to a fence. The walls were strengthened and thickened to prevent arrows from piercing them, to prevent fire and later to prevent bullets from easily passing through.

Matsuyama22.jpg Marugame2.jpg Kanazawa122.jpg Sakasai15.jpg


Structure

Dobei walls are built by erecting pillars approximately 1.5 meters apart. In between the pillars is a lattice of bamboo or wood strips. Mud and clay were then layered over this lattice up to about 20cm thick. The clay was often mixed with some strong Japanese grass (wara) for added strength and to prevent cracks. Earlier forms of these walls were not covered in plaster which gave them a sandy yellow color. In the picture above from Sakasai Castle you can see a wall with no plaster that shows this yellow color and you can also make out some grasses embedded in the clay. Edo Period dobei were usually covered in hard white plaster which increased their strength and helped prevent weathering. Atop the wall they had tile roofs and often had loopholes for firing arrows or guns. Walls also frequently had support posts behind them to increase their strength especially for walls along the top of stone walls or other places where the foundation was not as solid. Some walls also contained strategically placed rock chutes to drop rocks on attackers. Click the pictures below to enlarge these displays of wall construction.

Utsunomiya8.jpg Utsunomiya9.jpg Odawara24.jpg Kanazawa218.jpg


Variations

There are some extant variations of these walls that can be divided into neribei and tuijibei. Neither of these have the kind of wooden pillars or interior framework of the usual walls. Neribei are constructed from dried clay bricks or old tiles that are mortared together with clay and covered with a layer of hard plaster. Neribei were employed at Himeji and Bitchu Matsuyama castles to quickly build some walls.

Tuijibei are made from pounding a mixture sand and clay in 3-5 cm layers. They are about 1 meter thick and up to 3 meters tall. They have a distinctive wooden framework on the outside and are topped with a tile roof. These are very strong walls, but their thickness makes it impossible to build in loopholes and they are very time and labor intensive to build. For these reasons they were not commonly used at castles. There is a small section by the Mizu no Ichi gate at Himeji Castle and the Ninomaru of Nijo Castle is surrounded by impressive Tsuijibei.

Himeji34.jpg Himeji7.jpg Nijo17.jpg Shiwa15.jpg


Loopholes / Sama (狭間)

Loopholes were holes built into the walls for firing arrows or guns. Loopholes designed for arrows were generally tall rectangles and those for firearms were circles, triangles, or squares. Some loopholes were hidden by a door or plug that matched the surface on the outside to prevent detection by attackers. These are called kakushizama as you see in the last two photos below.

Himeji33.jpg Himeji35.jpg Hikone98.jpg Ozu53.jpg

Castles with Walls
  1. Aizu Wakamatsu Castle
  2. Akashi Castle
  3. Akechi Jin'ya
  4. Akechi Osayama Castle
  5. Akita Castle
  6. Akizuki Castle
  7. Ako Castle
  8. Amaga Castle
  9. Amagasaki Castle
  10. Aoyagi Castle
  11. Ashinoya Jin'ya
  12. Asuke Castle
  13. Baba Yashiki
  14. Bitchu Matsuyama Castle
  15. Echizen Katsuyama Castle
  16. Edo Castle
  17. Ema Yakata
  18. Fukuchiyama Castle
  19. Fukui Castle
  20. Fukuyama Castle
  21. Funai Castle
  22. Fushimi Castle
  23. Ganjaku Castle
  24. Gojou Daikansho
  25. Gujo Hachiman Castle
  26. Ha Castle
  27. Hachigata Castle
  28. Hagi Castle
  29. Hamamatsu Castle
  30. Hanamaki Castle
  31. Hikone Castle
  32. Himeji Castle
  33. Hiraizumi Date
  34. Hirosaki Castle
  35. Hiroshima Castle
  36. Honshouji Castle
  37. Hotta no Saku
  38. Ichijodani Castle
  39. Ide Yakata
  40. Iga Ueno Castle
  41. Iida Castle
  42. Iijima Jin'ya
  43. Iji Castle
  44. Ikeda Castle
  45. Imabari Castle
  46. Inuyama Castle
  47. Ishikawa Jouzan Yashiki
  48. Iwamura Castle
  49. Iyo Matsuyama Castle
  50. Izuki Jin'ya
  51. Izushi Castle
  52. Kakegawa Castle
  53. Kameyama Castle
  54. Kaminoyama Castle
  55. Kamioka Castle
  56. Kanazawa Castle
  57. Kashima Castle (Hizen)
  58. Katsumoto Castle
  59. Kawahara Castle
  60. Kawajiri Castle
  61. Kawasaki no Saku
  62. Kinowa Castle
  63. Kishiwada Castle
  64. Kiyosu Castle
  65. Kobayashi Castle (Owari)
  66. Kofu Castle
  67. Koiwatake Castle
  68. Koizumi Castle (Yamato)
  69. Kokura Castle
  70. Kozuka Jin'ya
  71. Kumamoto Castle
  72. Kuriyagawa no Saku
  73. Kyara Palace
  74. Marugame Castle
  75. Maruoka Castle
  76. Matsue Castle
  77. Matsumae Castle
  78. Matsumoto Castle
  79. Matsushiro Castle
  80. Mikazuki Jin'ya
  81. Miki Castle
  82. Minakuchi Castle
  83. Mito Castle
  84. Nabari Jinya
  85. Nabebuta Castle
  86. Nagata Jin'ya
  87. Nagisa Castle
  88. Nagoya Castle
  89. Nakatsu Castle
  90. Nakoso no Seki
  91. Nanokaichi Jin'ya
  92. Ne Castle
  93. Nihonmatsu Castle
  94. Nijo Castle
  95. Nishio Castle
  96. Nishiohhira Jin'ya
  97. Noda Castle (Shitara)
  98. Obata Jin'ya
  99. Obi Castle
  100. Odawara Castle
  101. Ogaki Castle
  102. Oguchi Castle
  103. Ogurayama Castle
  104. Ohmine Castle
  105. Ohmori Daikansho
  106. Ohtsuka Moated Settlement
  107. Okayama Castle
  108. Okutono Jin'ya
  109. Osaka Castle
  110. Oshi Castle
  111. Otaki Castle
  112. Sadowara Castle
  113. Saga Castle
  114. Sakasai Castle
  115. Sannohe Castle
  116. Sasayama Castle
  117. Sekiyado Castle
  118. Sendai Castle
  119. Shibata Castle
  120. Shimabara Castle
  121. Shirakawa Castle
  122. Shirakawa Komine Castle
  123. Shiroishi Castle
  124. Shiwa Castle
  125. Sonobe Castle
  126. Suibara Daikansho
  127. Sunomata Castle
  128. Sunpu Castle
  129. Takada Castle (Niigata)
  130. Takamatsu Castle
  131. Takane Castle
  132. Takasaki Castle
  133. Takashima Castle
  134. Takayama Jin'ya
  135. Takeda Yakata (Ibaraki)
  136. Tanabe Castle
  137. Tanabe Castle (Kii)
  138. Tanaka Castle
  139. Tatebayashi Castle
  140. Tatsuno Castle
  141. Tatsuoka Castle
  142. Terabe Castle (Hazu)
  143. Tojo Castle
  144. Tomioka Castle
  145. Torigoe Castle
  146. Tousenboubettou Yashiki
  147. Toyama Castle
  148. Toyo Daikansho
  149. Toyoda Tachi
  150. Tsu Castle
  151. Tsuchiura Castle
  152. Tsukikuma Castle
  153. Tsurugaoka Castle
  154. Tsutsujigasaki Palace
  155. Tsuyama Castle
  156. Ueda Castle
  157. Ueno Yashiki
  158. Usuki Castle
  159. Utsunomiya Castle
  160. Wakayama Castle
  161. Yamagata Castle
  162. Yamaguchi Yashiki
  163. Yamato Koriyama Castle
  164. Yuzuki Castle
  165. Zeze Castle
Loading map...