183.Kurume Castle Part3

Kurume offers unique culture in Japan.

Later History

After the incident in 1871, Kurume Castle was abandoned. All the buildings of the castle were demolished or sold. Even the stone walls of the Main Enclosure were sold and about to be taken out. However, local volunteers were worried and bought them back. That’s why we can still see the great stone walls as the castle ruins. As a result, the Sasayama Shrine was established in the Main Enclosure in 1877. The ruins have been a Prefectural Historic Site of the Fukuoka Prefecture since 1983.

Sasayama Shrine
The stone walls of the Tatsumi Turret

My Impression

Let me tell you about the other attractions in other places related to the Kurume Domain. The lord of the domain, like the others, possessed two residences, one in Kurume and one in Edo. The Suitengu Shrine was transferred from Kurume to the main residence in Edo. The shrine was open to the public and became very popular. This practice was rare at that time. Since then, the shrine has been a popular attraction in Tokyo.

Arima’s main residence in Edo, drawn on the right in a Ukiyoe painting, attributed to Hiroshige Utagwa the Second, exhibited by the National Diet Library of Japan
The present Suitengu Shrine in Tokyo (licensed by tak1701d via Wikimedia Commons)

Yoriyasu Arima, the 15th lord of the clan, promoted sports such as horse race and professional baseball in the 20th Century. A major horse race in Japan called Arima Kinen was named after his contribution.

Yoriyasu Arima (licensed by tak1701d via Wikimedia Commons)

How to get There

If you want to visit the ruins by car, it is a few minutes away from Kurume IC on the Kyushu Expressway.
You can park in the parking lots for visitors below the eastern side of the Main Enclosure. That space used to be the Mikan-maru or the Mandarin Enclosure.
If you want to use public transportation, it takes about 20 minutes on foot from the Kurume Station.
To get to Kurume Station from Tokyo or Osaka:Take the Sanyo Shinkansen super express or fly to Hakata Station and from there take the Kyushu Shinkansen super express or the limited express.

The entrance to the parking lot
The parking lot at the Mikan-maru Enclosure

That’s all. Thank you.
Back to “Kurume Castle Part1”
Back to “Kurume Castle Part2”

183.久留米城 その3

久留米はユニークな文化を発信しています。

その後

1871年の事件(久留米藩難事件と呼ばれています)の後、久留米城は廃城となり、城の全ての建物は撤去されるか売られていきました。本丸の石垣でさえ売却され、持ち出されるところでした。ところが、地元の有志たちがこの状況を憂え、その石垣を買い戻したのです。そのおかげで、われわれが今日城跡の石垣を見ることができるのです。そして、1877年には本丸に篠山神社が設立されました。1983年以来、城跡は福岡県の史跡に指定されています。

篠山神社
巽櫓跡の石垣

私の感想

久留米藩に関連して、他の場所で見られる他の見どころを紹介させてください。久留米藩の藩主は、他の大名と同じように2つの住居を持っていました。一つは久留米にあり、もう一つは江戸です。水天宮が、久留米から江戸にあった藩邸に勧請されました。そして民衆にも公開され、大変な人気となりました。当時このようなことはとても珍しかったのです。水天宮は現在の東京でも人気のある観光地になっています。

浮世絵に描かれた久留米藩上屋敷、二代歌川広重「東都名所芝赤羽根増上寺」、藩邸は右側、出典:国立国会図書館
東京にある現在の水天宮  (licensed by tak1701d via Wikimedia Commons)

有馬頼寧(よりやす)は有馬家第15代目の当主で、20世紀に競馬やプロ野球(東京セネタースを設立)などのスポーツ振興に尽くしました。日本でメジャーな競馬レースである有馬記念は、彼の功績にちなんで名づけられました。

有馬頼寧  (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

ここに行くには

車で行く場合:九州自動車道の久留米ICから数分のところにあります。本丸の東側下に観光客向けの駐車場があります。その場所は、かつては蜜柑丸という曲輪でした。
公共交通機関を使う場合は、久留米駅から歩いて約20分かかります。
東京または大阪から久留米駅まで:山陽新幹線に乗るか飛行機で博多駅まで行き、そこから九州新幹線か特急に乗ってください。

駐車場入口
蜜柑丸にある駐車場

リンク、参考情報

久留米城跡、久留米観光コンベンション国際交流協会
・「よみがえる日本の城20」学研
・「日本の城改訂版第50号」デアゴスティーニジャパン
・「知るっぱ久留米、久留米入城400年」ドリームスFM

これで終わります。ありがとうございました。
「久留米城その1」に戻ります。
「久留米城その2」に戻ります。

183.Kurume Castle Part2

The stone walls of the castle are still intact.

Features

Great Stone Walls of Main Enclosure

Today, only the Main Enclosure remains as the ruins of Kurume Castle. The ruins have no castle buildings, but its stone walls are still mostly intact. The scale of the enclosure is not so large, about 150m from north to south and about 100m from east to west. It is surprising to imagine there were seven three-story turrets all connected by two-story row-style turrets in such a limited space. There is the Sasayama Shrine which worships the Arima Clan in the enclosure.

The map around the castle

The ruins of Kurume Castle now have only the Main Enclosure
Sasayama Shrine

Newer Stone Walls of Southern side

The front side of the enclosure is facing the south, which is also the entrance of the shrine. The only remaining water moat is located on that side. You can see the great high stone walls with a height of 15m. The stone walls of this side are constituted of piled, aligned square cut stones, in a method called Nuno-zumi. This method is newer than the one used in the rest of the castle, so it is thought that they were built by the Arima Clan.

The entrance of the southern side
The high stone walls of the southern side

The three three-story turrets; Tatsumi(Southeast), Taiko(Drum) and Hitsujisaru(Southwest) Turrets used to stand on the stone walls. In particular, the Tatsumi Turret was the largest, which meant it was the symbol and the substitute of the Main Tower of the castle.

The ruins of Tatsumi Turret
The stone walls under the Tatsumi Turret Ruins

Inside of Main Enclosure

You can enter the enclosure through the ruins of the Kabuki-gomon Gate, on the paved route turning left. The route used to pass by a defensive square space called Masugata, but it is not visible clearly since the route was paved.

The ruins of the Kabuki-gomon Gate
Entering the Main Enclosure

In the enclosure, there is the Arima Memorial Museum which exhibits the legacy of the Arima Clan, which the Sasayama Shrine isn’t a part of. The museum is on the ruins of the Hitsujisatu and Nishishita(West) Turrets. On or beside the ruins of the other turrets, there are several monuments about the local history. For example, there is the monument for remembering the sufferers of the incident in 1871 on the ruins of the Taiko Turret, where you can see its great stone walls close nearby.

The ruins of the Taiko Turret
the monument for remembering the sufferers of the incident on the Taiko Turret Ruins, on the right of the picture (licensed by そらみみ via Wikimedia Commons)
A view of the high stone walls from the Taiko Turret Ruins

There is also the monument for the 56th Infantry Regiment of the Japanese Army beside the ruins of the Ushitora(Northeast) Turret, where you can see the Chikugo River.

The monument for the 56th Infantry Regiment of the Japanese Army
the ruins of the Ushitora Turret
A view of the Chikugo River

The Older Stone Walls of Eastern side

You can also enjoy a great view of the stone walls at the eastern side of the enclosure. The surface of the stone walls is made of piled roughly processed stones with small stones filling the gaps. This method is called Uchikomi-hagi. On the other hand, their corners are made of piled processed rectangular stones alternately, following the method called Sangi-zumi. These methods are older than the one used at the southern side, so these stone walls might have been built by the Mori or Tanaka Clans.

The stone walls of the eastern side
The stone walls at a corner, made of piled processed rectangular stones alternately

There is another entrance with stone steps on this side, beside the ruins of the Tsukimi(Moon watching) Turret. It might had also been the front gate as this side had originally been the front side of the enclosure. You can see the Kurume University playground from the turret ruins, which was once a water moat of the castle.

The ruins of the Tsukimi Turret
The entrance of the eastern side beside the Tsukimi Turret Ruins
The Kurume University playground

To be continued in “Kurume Castle Part3”
Back to “Kurume Castle Part1”