76.Tokushima Castle Part2

The contrasting red and green stone walls with the quiet background of the mountain

Features

Rare and Beautiful Stone Walls

Now, the ruins of Tokushima Castle is open to the public as Tokushima Central Park which includes both the mountain and plain parts. Visitors typically go to the plain area first which is still surrounded by the stone walls and the Inner Moat. The stone walls of this castle are very rare and beautiful because they were piled up using stones with a dark-green striped pattern called chlorite‐schist. These stones are also known as Green stones of Awa. Moreover, some parts of stone walls included stones called piedmontite schist also known as Red Stones. The contrast of green and red in the stone walls looks more beautiful.

The aerial photo around the castle

The monument of the ruins of Tokushima Castle
The stone walls built using chlorite‐schist
The contrast of green and red in the stone walls

August Entrance of Castle

There are no original buildings of the castle, but only the front gate called Washi-no-mon which was restored in 1989. You can enter the center of the park behind the gate by crossing the Gejo Bridge and passing the ruins of Kuro-mon Gate. The remaining stone walls of the gate and the neighboring Taiko-yagura Turret looks great as they were recognized as the main gate. Inside the stone walls, there are several attractions worth seeing, such as the flower square, Tokushima Castle Museum, and the remaining Japanese Garden of the Main Hall which was designated as a National Scenic Beauty. You can also enjoy walking on the inside route which is surrounded by the stone walls.

The restored Washi-no-mon Gate
You can enter the ruins of Koro-mon Gate after crossing the Gejo Bridge
Looking down the Gejo Bridge from the stone walls of Koro-mon Gate
The stone walls of Kuro-mon Gate
The inside route in the park

Mountain with Silent atmosphere

You can visit the mountain part as well. The mountain is now called Shiro-yama or The Castle Mountain. The route to the top of the mountain has been developed with the modern stone stairways so that visitors can climb easily. The enclosures on the mountain became empty where the signposts show the names of the enclosures and what buildings there were such as the Main Tower on the Eastern Second Enclosure. From the Main Enclosure on the top, you will see a view of Tokushima City. The ruins of Yumi-yagura Turret in the enclosure was where the first Main Tower was built. The stone walls on the mountain look much older than on the plain area. This is probably because the mountain part was built earlier than the plain part. It seems that fewer people visit the mountain now, but you can still enjoy a quiet atmosphere there.

The stone stairways to the mountain
The Eastern Second Enclosure
The Main Enclosure
A view from the Main Enclosure
The stone walls of Yumi-yagura Turret
The stone walls at the entrance of the Western Second Enclosure

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

76.徳島城 その2

物静かな山を背後に、緑と赤の石垣のコントラストが楽しめます。

特徴、見どころ

珍しく、美しい石垣

現在、徳島城跡は徳島中央公園として一般に公開されており、山上と平地両方の部分が含まれています。観光客は、一般的には最初は石垣と内堀に囲まれた平地部分を訪れます。徳島城の石垣は、大変珍しく且つ美しいものです。緑泥片岩(りょくでいへんがん)と呼ばれる深緑色の縞模様がある石を使って積み上げられているからです。これらの石は「阿波の青石」としても知られています。その上に石垣の一部は、これも「赤石」として知られる紅簾片岩(こうれんへんがん)が使われています。石垣に映えるこの緑と赤のコントラストは、ひと際美しく見えます。

城周辺の航空写真

徳島城跡のモニュメント
緑泥片岩を使って築かれた石垣
「青石」と「赤石」が組み合わされた部分

威厳ある城の入口

現存している城の建物はありませんが、城の正門である鷲の門が、1989年に復元されました。その門を後にしてから、下乗橋を渡って、黒門跡を通って、公園の中心部に入っていきます。黒門跡とその傍にある太鼓櫓跡の石垣は特に立派です。ここは大手門とされていたからです。石垣から内側の方には、花壇(お花見広場、バラ園など)、徳島城博物館、国の特別名勝に指定されている現存する御殿庭園など見どころがいくつもあります。石垣に囲まれた公園内の遊歩道を歩くだけでも楽しめます。

復元された鷲の門
下乗橋を渡って黒門跡へ
黒門跡の石垣から下乗橋を見下ろす
黒門の石垣
公園内の遊歩道

静かな雰囲気の山の上

山上部分に行ってみることもできます。この山は、現在は城山と呼ばれています。山頂への通路は現代的な石段が作られ、よく整備されているので、登っていくのはそれ程大変ではありません。山上の曲輪は空き地になっていますが、説明板を見ると、その曲輪の名前と、そこにどんな建物が建っていたのかがわかります。例えば、東二の丸には天守が築かれていました。頂上の本丸からは、徳島市街を眺めることができます。この曲輪にある弓櫓跡には、初代天守が建てられていました。山上部分の石垣は、平地部分のそれより、ずっと古いものに見えます。それは恐らく山上部分が平地部分より早く建設されたからでしょう。今日、山上部分を訪れる人は少ないように見えますが、静かな雰囲気を味わいたいのであれば、それもよいかもしれません。

山上への石段
東二の丸
本丸
本丸からの眺め
弓櫓の石垣
西二の丸入口の石垣

「徳島城その3」に続きます。
「徳島城その1」に戻ります。

76.Tokushima Castle Part1

Many evolution of Tokushima Castle

Location and History

Iemasa Hachisuka built Castle

Tokushima Castle was located in what is the modern day Tokushima City. The prefectural capital of Tokushima Prefecture is Tokushima City. The old name for Tokushima Prefecture was called Awa Province, where the Chosokabe Clan and the ruler, Hideyoshi Toyotomi battled in the late 16th Century during the Sengoku Period. Hideyoshi finally won and he gave the province to his senior vassal, Iemasa Hachisuka in 1585. Iemasa first lived in one of the major mountain castles, called Ichinomiya Castle, but he soon moved to another place in 1586, building a new castle named Tokushima Castle.

The location of the castle

The portrait of Iemasa Hachisuka, private owned (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The ruins of Ichinomiya Castle

building network of sea transportation

Tokushima Castle was built on Inoyama Mountain which was 62m high on a sandbank called Inotsu. The sandbank was among the delta of Yoshino-gawa River, the largest river in Shikoku Island. The place where the castle was built was not spacious for the lord of the province. It was said that Hideyoshi suggested that the castle should be built at that place. So why did he instruct Iemasa to build the castle at such a place? Historians speculate that Hideyoshi tried to build the network of sea transportation with his home base, Osaka Castle. Tokushima was renamed by Inotsu and had a location which was capable of controling the sea lanes such as Kii Channel. The area was the entrance to Osaka Bay in which Osaka Castle was facing. The network consisted of both navy and merchant fleets. Another possible reason was that The Hachisuka Clan still had to send their retainers to branch castles called the Awa Nine Castles against the resistances of Chosokabe. That meant Hachisuka’s home base didn’t need a large space.

Part of the illustration of Tokushima Castle in Awa Province, exhibited by the National Archives of Japan, you can see the castle was built among the sandbanks

The relief map around the castle, Inoyama Mountain stands out among the delta

The positional relation between Tokushima Castle and Osaka Castle

Osaka Castle

Center of Castle was once on Mountain

Inoyama was a dogleg mountain which extended from the east to the west. The Main Enclosure was on the highest, the largest and rounded part of the mountain, which was thought to have the first Main Tower and the first Main Hall for the lord. However, the Main Tower was scraped about 30 years after its foundation for some unknown reasons and rebuilt in the Eastern Second Enclosure of the lower eastern part of the mountain. This was a very rare case because most castles had their Main Tower at the highest point of the mountain. There’s only one other castle that had a similar case, which was Mito Castle. However, its reason was more obvious. Its main reason was that it was small and inconvenient. The western part of the mountain also had the Western Second Enclosure and the Western Third Enclosure that protected the Main Enclosure. These enclosures on the mountain got surrounded by stone walls one by one. On the other hand, the plain area on the sandbank in the south of the mountain was not fully developed. Experts speculate that there were probably two main halls instead of one primary hall on the mountain. This secondary hall on the plain area was used as the home of the lord and its warriors. Tokushima Castle was specifically designed for battles that took place during the first generation of its existence.

The enclosures were built on Inoyama Mountain, the Main Tower was built on the lower eastern part. not on the Main Enclosure (Part of the illustration of Tokushima Castle in Awa Province)

The aerial photo around Mito castle

The old photo of the Main Tower of Mito Castle at the Second Enclosure

Center of Castle moves to plain area

After the Tokugawa Shogunate defeated the Toyotomi Clan in 1615, the governance of the shogunate finally became stable. The Hachisuka Clan was also able to spread their territory by adding the Awaji Province through supporting the shogunate. Due to the long period of peace, The nine branch castles were eventually abandoned. As a result, the retainers gathered in Tokushima Castle which needed to be reconstructed. The large scale of the Main Hall for the lord was rebuilt on the plain area and became the center of the castle. It was also surrounded by stone walls with several turrets, and fences called Byobu-bei along with the Inner Moat and the Terashima-gawa River. The southern side of it had the Kuro-mon Gate as its main gate with the three-story turret called Taiko-yagura next to it, which looked like the main tower. In addition, there was also the Miki Enclosure in the south of the Main Hall with the front gate called Washi-no-mon. Many of the rivers around the castle were also reclaimed and turned into the warriors’ residences and the castle town. The Hachisuka Clan lived in the castle until the end of the Edo Period.

The plain area where the Main Hall was built, the hall was not drawn intentionally (Part of the illustration of Tokushima Castle in Awa Province)
The Kuro-mon Gate and Taiko-yagura Turret (Part of the illustration of Tokushima Castle in Awa Province)
The Miki Enclosure and Washi-no-mon Gate (Part of the illustration of Tokushima Castle in Awa Province)

To be continued in “Tokushima Castle Part2”