136.Torigoe Castle Part1

It’s history and role in the Kaga Ikko Uprising

Location and History

Emergence of Ikkoshu Sect

Torigoe Castle was located at the foot of the Hakusan Mountain in Kaga Province, which is now Hakusan City, Ishikawa Prefecture. It is known for the final place where the people of the lkkoshu Sect in the province, fought with the warlords to the last man in a conflict known as the Kaga Ikko uprising. After the Onin War in Kyoto in 1467, almost all the people in Japan had to protect themselves because the authority of the Ashikaga Shogunate had decreased in power. This is called the Sengoku Period, also known as the Warring States Period. Not only the lords and warriors, but also farmers and merchants along those at the temples had the power to maintain their territory and rights.

The location of the castle

A scene of the Onin War, from a picture scroll of the Origin of Shinnyo-do Temple (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

The lkkoshu was one of the sects of Buddhism, which spread across the country during that period. Many people believed it because the sect says if you only speak “Hail to Amitabha Buddha”, you would go to heaven. In addition to this simple doctrine, the 8th head of the sect in the 15th Century, Rennyo worked actively to build local organizations especially in what is now the Chubu Region, including Kaga Province. The organizations were primarily religious, but they eventually had political, economic, and military power with the situation of the period. Even a warlord asked the sect for help when fighting another warlord. When the sect fought for something, it was called Ikko-Ikki, or the Ikko uprising, having a big impact on the entire country. As a result, the sect acted like a warlord and his warriors, with its headquarters, called Ishiyama-Honganji Temple, at the former Osaka Castle.

The portrait of Rennyo (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The miniature model of the Ishiyama-Honganji Temple, owned by Osaka Castle Museum (licensed by ブレイズマン via Wikimedia Commons)
The present Osaka Castle

Castle in Province owned by Peasants

Kaga Province had one of the strongest organizations in the sect. The people in the organization, called the Kaga Ikko uprising, first supported the governor of the province, from the Togashi Clan, but soon fought against and defeated the clan. This was due to the high taxes the clan imposed, but the local lords in the sect also wanted to take lands away from the clan. The sect established Oyama-gobo Temple, the former Kanazawa Castle, to govern the province by themselves. Kaga Province was known as “a province owned by peasants”. The temple was the home base of the Kaga Ikko uprising and probably looked like a castle. The Kaga Ikko uprising also had many branch castles, including Torigoe Castle, in the province to protect themselves.

Gokuraku-bashi Bridge in Kanazawa Castle, which derived its name from the period of Oyama-Gobo Temple
The present Kanazawa Castle
The restored Torigoe Castle in the present time

Torigoe Castle was the site of an internal group, called Yamanouchi-shu, in the Kaga Ikko uprising. The castle was built on a mountain above the meeting point of the Tedori-gawa and Dainichi-gawa Rivers. The castle had the Main Enclosure on the top. The other enclosures were around the Main Enclosure and along the ridge of the mountain. All the enclosures were made of soil and divided by the dry moats, using natural terrain. Such a castle could have been seen across Japan at that time as a “mountain castle”. It is thought that the head of the group, Suzuki Dewa-no-kami built the castle to protect them from Nobunaga Oda’s attacks.

The map around the castle

The relief map around the castle

Torigoe Castle was built using natural terrain

End of Kaga Ikko uprising

Nobunaga Oda was a great warlord who processed the unification of Japan in the 1570s-80s. He asked the religious institutions to waive their political and military power. If a temple rejected his request, he would destroy the temple completely, such as the fire attack on Mt. Hiei in 1571. Previously, in 1570, Nobunaga asked the Ikkoshu Sect to withdraw from its home base, Ishiyama-Honganji Temple. The sect refused, and after that, they fought each other for the next 11 years, known as the Battle of Ishiyama. Nobunaga’s retainers also attacked the local organizations of the Ikkoshu Sect, including the Kaga Ikko uprising. The Yamanouchi-shu group battled Nobunaga’s troops at Torigoe Castle even after Ishiyama-Honganji Temple surrendered in 1580. However, they were finally defeated, and with the rest of the survivors being killed in 1582. This could be considered as the final resistance of the Kaga Ikko uprising.

The portrait of Nobunaga Oda, attributed to Soshu Kano, owned by Chokoji Temple (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The image of Battle of Ishiyama, owned by Wakayama City Museum (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
Torigoe Castle, the final place for the people of the Kaga Ikko uprising

To be continued in “Torigoe Castle Part2”

136.鳥越城 その1

加賀一向一揆の歴史とその果たした役割

立地と歴史

一向宗の台頭

鳥越城は、現在の石川県白山市にあたる、加賀国の白山山麓にありました。この城は、加賀国一向宗門徒の最後の抵抗地とされており、加賀一向一揆として知られる闘争の中で、彼らは戦国大名と最後の一兵まで戦ったのです。1467年に起こった応仁の乱の後は、日本のほとんど全ての人たちは自衛しなければならなくなりました。足利将軍家の権威が著しく衰えてしまったからです。これが戦国時代と呼ばれている時代です。領主層や武士だけでなく、農民や商人、そして寺院の僧までが、領地や権益を守るために武装する必要がありました。

城の位置

応仁の乱の様子、「真如堂縁起絵巻」より  (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

一向宗は、仏教の宗派の一つで、この時代に国中に広まりました。この宗派では、「南無阿弥陀仏」と唱えされすれば極楽に行けると称したため、多くの人々が信仰しました。この単純な教義に加えて、15世紀後半に第8代の宗主であった蓮如が精力的に活動し、(講などと呼ばれる)地方組織を構築し、特に、加賀国を含む現在の中部地方に広まりました。この組織はもともと宗教のために存在していましたが、時代の状況の中で、政治、経済、そして軍事的な色彩も帯びていきました。戦国大名でさえ、他の大名と戦うために一向宗に援軍を求めたりしました(例えば幕府の管領、細川政元が1506年に畠山氏と戦ったとき、当時の宗主、実如は援軍を政元側に派遣しました)。一向宗が何かのために戦ったとき、その行為は一向一揆と呼ばれ、全国的に大きなインパクトを与えました。その結果、一向宗はまるで戦国大名とその配下の武士のように振舞うようになりました。その本拠地は、後の大坂城となる石山本願寺にありました。

蓮如影像  (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
石山本願寺の模型、大阪城天守閣蔵 (licensed by ブレイズマン via Wikimedia Commons)
現在の大坂城

百姓の持ちたる国の城

加賀国では、一向宗の中でも最も強固な組織化がなされていました。その組織内の人々は加賀一向一揆と呼ばれ、当初は加賀国の守護、富樫氏を支持していましたが、やがて戦うことになり、ついにはこれを倒しました。このことは、富樫氏が高い税を賦課したのが原因ですが、一向宗に属していた地元領主たちが領地を富樫氏から奪いたかったという事情もあったのです。彼らは、国を自分たちで治めるために、後の金沢城となる尾山御坊を設立しました。加賀国は、「百姓の持ちたる国」として知られました。尾山御坊は、加賀一向一揆の本拠地であり、恐らくは城のような姿をしていたのでしょう。加賀一向一揆はまた、国の防衛のために多くの支城を持っていました。鳥越城はその内の一つでした。

金沢城内ある極楽橋、その名前の由来は尾山御坊時代に遡ると言われています
現在の金沢城
現代に復元された鳥越城

鳥越城は、加賀一向一揆の内部組織である山内衆(やまのうちしゅう)の拠点でした。この城は、手取川と大日川(だいにちがわ)の合流時点の上流側にある山の上に築かれました。頂上には本丸があり、他の曲輪は本丸の周辺や山の峰に沿って配置されていました。全ての曲輪は自然の地形を生かしながらの土造りで、空堀によって隔てられていました。このような城は「山城」として、その当時日本中で見られたのです。山内衆のリーダーであった鈴木出羽守が、織田信長の攻撃から防御するためにこの城を築いたと考えられています。

城周辺の地図

城周辺の起伏地図

鳥越城は自然の地形を生かして築かれました

加賀一向一揆の最後

織田信長は有力な戦国大名で、1570年代から1580年代にかけて天下統一を進めていました。彼は宗教勢力に対して、政治的軍事的領域から手を引くよう求めていました。もし、寺院側がその要求を断った場合、信長は1571年の比叡山焼き討ちのように、その寺院を徹底的に破壊しました。それ以前の1570年には、信長は一向宗に対して本拠地の石山本願寺から退去するよう求めていました。一向宗はそれを断り、それから石山合戦として知られる11年にもわたる戦いを行ったのです。信長の部下たちもまた、加賀一向一揆を含む一向宗の地方組織を攻撃しました(柴田勝家が北陸方面に派遣され、加賀一向一揆と戦いました)。山内衆は、1580年に石山本願寺が信長に降伏した後でさえ、鳥越城で信長の軍勢と戦い続けました(城を取ったり取られたりする激戦でした)。しかし、ついには落城し、戦いに生き残った者も殺されました。1582年のことです。これが、加賀一向一揆の最後の抵抗とされています。

織田信長肖像画、狩野宗秀作、長興寺蔵 (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
石山合戦図、和歌山市立博物館蔵 (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
加賀一向一揆の最後の拠点となった鳥越城

「鳥越城その2」に続きます。

36.Maruoka Castle Part3

The Main Tower survived two crises.

Later History

After the Meiji Restoration, Maruoka Castle was abandoned. All the buildings of the castle including the Main Tower were sold. However, the tower was priced very low because it couldn’t be used for general offices or residences. It was impossible to scrap or move the tower for a low price. The buyer was not able to do anything to the tower, while the other buildings were moved or demolished. All of the water moats were also filled to create more land space in the city. The owners of the tower finally donated it to the officials in 1901. That’s why only the Main Tower remains now.

The miniature model of Maruoka Castle, all the buildings of the castle except for the Main Tower were sold and demolished.

In 1948, The Main Tower and its stone wall base collapsed due to the Fukui Earthquake. However, people in this area restored the tower in 1955 to almost the same condition as the original one. This was because they researched the details of the tower when it was repaired 8 years before the earthquake. They used about 70% of the original main materials to restore it. Such a method is usually used to repair other remaining castle buildings in Japan. That means the Main Tower of Maruoka Castle is valuable like it had been before the earthquake.

The stone grampuses which fell from the roof when the earthquake happened

My Impression

If you have time after visiting the inside of the Main Tower of Maruoka Castle, how about walking around the castle along the trace of the Inner Moat? The moat was turned into city area, but the outer edge of the moat remains as a road. If you walk along the road, you can look up a beautiful view of the Main Tower on the hill. I was honestly envious of the people who can see the view every day when I walked. In fact, Sakai City is considering restoring part of the Inner Moat and make a park inside it over the next 50 years to make the castle more attractive.

The Main Tower of Maruoka Castle seen from the road, former Inner Moat

The trace of the Inner Moat on the present road

Another photo from a different point on the road

How to get There

If you want to visit there by car:
It is about 10 minutes away from Maruoka IC on Hokuriku Expressway.
The castle park offers a parking lot.
By public transportation, take the bus bound for Eiheiji-eki-mae from JR Maruoka Station and get off at the Maruoka Bus Terminal bus stop. It takes about 5 minutes to get there on foot.
To get to Maruoka Station from Tokyo: Take the Hokuriku Shinkansen super express, transfer to the Hokuriku Line at Kanazawa Station.
From Osaka: Take the Thunderbird limited express and transfer to a local train on the Hokuriku Line at Fukui Station.

That’s all. Thank you.
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