4.Hirosaki Castle Part2

The castle remains in nearly its original range.

Features

From Outer Moat to Third Enclosure

Surprisingly, almost all the range of Hirosaki Castle remains as Hirosaki Park.

The aerial photo around the castle, it looks almost the same as the old illustration of the castle below.

Part of the illustration of Hirosaki Castle in Tsugaru District, in the Edo Period, exhibited by the National Archives of Japan

If you visit the park from the south such as Hirosaki Station, you will enter the Main Gate at the Third Enclosure surrounded by the earthen walls and the Outer Moat. You will also find huge amount of cherry trees planted on the earthen walls and can imagine beautiful cherry blossoms even if it is not spring.

Around the Outer Moat with cherry trees planted

The gate is one of the two remaining gate buildings at the enclosure. You may also find the gate turning to the other side not facing you. This is because other castles built in the same period as Hirosaki Castle usually have a gateway with two gate buildings. The first one is facing the visitors and the second one is turning to other the side. The two buildings form a square space with other walls to protect the castle, called “Masugata”. In the case of Hirosaki Castle, the first one was omitted, which has a very unique style.

The Main Gate of Hirosaki Castle
An example of the Masugata style from the restored Yamanote-mon Gate of Kofu Castle

There is an Information Center in the enclosure.

The Third Enclosure

Second Enclosure still has all its Gates and turrets

The aerial photo of around the Second Enclosure

You will walk inside, then see the Second Enclosure surrounded by the earthen walls and the Central Moat. It is also amazing that the two gates and three Three-Story Turrets of the enclosure all remain now. These turrets have cooper plate roof tiles, which make them look thin. The combination of the turrets and the earthen walls also look very good. There is an Information Center in the enclosure.

The entrance of the Second Enclosure
The remaining Second Enclosure South Gate
The remaining Second Enclosure Tatsumi Turret
The remaining Second Enclosure Hitsuji-saru Turret

Main Enclosure where Main Tower was once moved

The aerial photo around the Main Enclosure

You will soon reach the Main Enclosure with the remaining Main Tower inside the Inner Moat. In fact, the stone walls on the eastern side of the enclosure are being repaired (as of Sep 2021). This is because the surface of the stone walls are inflated that might collapse if there’s an earthquake.

The stone walls of the Main Enclosure which are being restored

For this reason, the Main Tower was once moved from the stone wall base at the southeast corner to the center of the enclosure. Therefore, you can see the Main Tower close by. The two sides of the tower that faces the outside are much decorated. On the other hand, the other sides facing the inner part are very simple. It might be for that the tower was at first built as a substitute, anyway it’s so interesting.

The present stone wall for the Main Tower without it
The sides of the Main Tower which are decorated
The sides of the Main Tower which are very simple

You can also see the large stone base for the first five-layer Main Tower at the southwest corner in the enclosure. If the weather is fine, you can see a great view of Iwaki-san Mountain from there.

The stone wall base for the first Main Tower
A view from the stone wall base
The view could be like this if the weather is fine (taken by u**m from photoAC)

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

4.弘前城 その2

城は、ほとんど元と同じ範囲で残っています。

特徴、見どころ

外堀から三の丸へ

驚くべきことに、ほとんど全ての弘前城の範囲がそのまま弘前公園として残っています。

城周辺の航空写真、下の古絵図とほとんど同じに見えます

津軽弘前城之絵図部分、江戸時代(出展:国立公文書館)

南の方、例えば弘前駅の方から公園を訪れる場合、土塁と外堀に囲まれた三の丸にある追手門から入って行くことになるでしょう。また、その土塁には夥しい数の桜の木が植えられていて、春でなくても美しい桜の花で飾られるだろうと想像できます。

桜の木が植えられた外堀周辺

追手門は三の丸に残っている2つの門のうちの一つです。門に入るとき、その門が正面を向いていないことに気づくかもしれません。それは、弘前城と同じ時期に建てられた城には、通常2つの門の建物を持つ関門がありました。1番目の門は正面を向き、2番目の門は別の方向を向いていました。2つの門は、壁面とともに四角い空間を形作り、「桝形」と呼ばれ、城を守っていました。弘前城の場合は、その1番目の門が省略されていて、とても独特なスタイルです。

弘前城の追手門
甲府城に見る桝形の例(復元された山手門)

三の丸は現在、植物園、公共施設、リラックスゾーンになっています。

三の丸

全ての門と櫓が残る二の丸

二の丸周辺の航空写真

更に中に入っていくと、土塁と中堀に囲まれた二の丸が見えてきます。これもまた驚きですが、二の丸にあった2つの門と3つの三階櫓が今日全て残っているのです。櫓の屋根には銅板が使われていて、それが櫓をスマートに見せています。櫓と土塁の組み合わせもとても合っています。二の丸にはインフォメーションセンターがあります。

二の丸の入口
現存する二の丸南門
現存する二の丸辰巳(たつみ)櫓
現存する二の丸未申(ひつじさる)櫓

天守が引越し中の本丸

本丸周辺の航空写真

やがて、内堀の中の、天守がある本丸に到着します。実は、本丸の東側の石垣が修理中です(2021年12月現在)。その石垣の表面が膨張しており、地震が起こった場合崩れかねないからです。

修復中の本丸石垣

そのため、天守は本丸の東南隅にある天守台石垣から一時的に移動されています。よって、天守をすぐ近くに見ることができます。外側を向いている二面は、派手に飾り付けられています。一方、内側を向いている他の面はとても地味です。最初は天守の代用品として作られたからかもしれません。いずれにせよ大変面白いことです。

天守のない現在の天守台石垣
天守の飾り付けされた面
天守の飾り付けがない面

本丸の西南隅には、最初の天守があった大規模な石垣台があります。天気が良ければ、ここから岩木山の雄大な眺めを見ることができます。

最初の天守があった石垣台
石垣台からの眺め
晴れていればこのように見えるはず (taken by u****************m from photoAC)

「弘前城その3」に続きます。
「弘前城その1」に戻ります。

4.Hirosaki Castle Part1

A castle which the Tsugaru Clan built and maintained.

Location and History

Tamenobu Tsugaru built Castle with his independence

Hirosaki Castle was located in what is now Hirosaki City in Aomori Prefecture. The castle was actually the origin of the city since the founder of the Hirosaki Domain, Tamenobu Tsugaru built the castle. His former name was Tamenobu Oura and he was one of the relatives of the Nanbu Clan, the greatest warlord in the northern Tohoku Region in the 16th Century during the Sengoku Period. However, he aimed to be independent from the Nanbu Clan.

The portrait of Tamenobu Tsugaru, owned by Hirosaki Castle Tower (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

When the ruler Hideyoshi Toyotomi was processing his unification of Japan, Tamenobu met Hideyoshi in 1590, and succeeded to be approved by Hideyoshi as an independent lord. He took advantage of his freedom, and he changed his family name to Tsugaru. After that, he maintained his territory around Tsugaru District (what is now the western part of Aomori Pref.) to support the Tokugawa Shogunate. Finally, he started to build a new castle in the Tsugaru Plain as his new home base in 1603, called Hirosaki Castle.

The location of the castle

Hirosaki Castle was built on a hill on the plain sandwiched by two rivers, Iwaki-gawa and Tsuchibuchi-gawa. Though Tamenobu unfortunately died soon after the launch of the construction, his son, Nobuhira completed it in 1611.

The portrait of Nobuhira Tsugaru, from the database of Historiographical Institute The University of Tokyo (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
Tsuchibuchi-gawa River which flows in the city area now

Combination of Modern and Traditional parts

The castle had the Iwaki-gawa River on the back in the west side, and several enclosures spread towards the north, the east and the south, divided by water moats. The Main Enclosure was the center of the castle having the five-layer Main Tower and the Main Hall for the lord. The enclosure was all surrounded by stone walls, so was the most modernized place in the castle.

The Main Enclosure of Hirosaki Castle from the illustration of Hirosaki Castle in Tsugaru District, exhibited by the National Archives of Japan
The Western Moat which originates from a branch of Iwaki-gawa River
The stone walls of the Main Enclosure

The Second Enclosure was outside the Main Enclosure in the south and the east, where the halls for the senior vassals were built. The enclosure was surrounded by earthen walls which were the common method for castles in eastern Japan. It also had two gates and three three-story turrets to protect it. The Third Enclosure was the outermost and the largest one is in the castle. It had warriors’ residences and was also surrounded by earthen walls with two gates. One of the gates was the Main Gate in the south. The North Enclosure and the Forth Enclosure were next to the Main Enclosure to protect the north of the castle.

Part of the illustration of Hirosaki Castle in Tsugaru District, in the Edo Period, exhibited by the National Archives of Japan
The earthen walls and moat of the Second Enclosure
The Main Gate at the Third Enclosure

Main Tower was rebuilt and Castle survived in Meiji Restoration

In 1627, there was an explosion in the Main Tower caused by lightning and an ignition of gunpowder. There had been no main tower for nearly 200 years, but the Hirosaki Domain was allowed by the Shogunate to renovate a three-story turret as the substitute for the Main Tower in1811. This is the present Main Tower we can see today. In 1868 during the Meiji Restoration, the Boshin War between the New Government and the domains supporting Tokugawa Shogunate in the Tohoku Region happened. Many domains fought with the New Government and defeated. However, the Tsugaru Domain supported the New Government from the beginning. That’s why Hirosaki Castle remained intact.

The present Main Tower
Tsuguakira Tsugaru, the last lord of the Hirosaki Domain (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

To be continued in “Hirosaki Castle Part2”