50.Hikone Castle Part1

The home base of the Ii Clan, a senior vassal of the shogunate

Location and History

Shogunate sent Ii Clan to Important Military Base

Hikone Castle is located near Biwa Lake in Shiga Prefecture and considered as one of the most popular historical sites in Japan. It has its Main Tower which is one of the twelve remaining and the five national-treasure Main Towers in Japan. It also has five castle buildings which are designated as Important Cultural Properties. The main portion of the castle also remains in a good condition with the buildings above, stone walls, and other structures. Because of it, the castle site has been designated as a National Special Historic Site since 1956.

The remaining Main Tower of Hikone Castle, as a National Traesure
The Western Enclosure Three-level Turret of Hikone Castle, as an Important Cultural Property

After the Battle of Sekigahara between Ieyasu Tokugawa and Mitsunari Ishida in 1600, Ieyasu got the power as the ruler of Japan. Ieyasu promoted his senior vassal, Naomasa Ii to the lord of the territory beside Biwa Lake, which Mitsuanri had owned. Naomasa first lived a mountain castle called Sawayama Castle Mitsunari lived. However, Naomasa thought it was not enough because he needed a stronger and more convenient castle. The Toyotomi Clan was still at Osaka Castle and there were many lords in western Japan, who thought their master was Toyotomi, not Tokugawa. They might have gotten together and attacked the Tokugawa Shogunate which Ieyasu established in eastern Japan. Naomasa’s territory was located in the area which could avoid the attack to eastern Japan.

The location of the castle

The portrait of Naomasa Ii, owned by Hikone Castle Museum (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

Castle is built as Construction Order by Shogunate

After Naomasa died in 1602, his young son, Naotsugu conducted the new castle’s location with Ieyasu. They finally decided to build it on a low mountain at 50m high near Biwa Lake, which would be called Hikone Castle. The castle was built as a construction order by the shogunate with help of over 10 other lords. In order to hurry to complete the construction, they used waste materials from other abandoned castles like Sawayama Castle. However, the construction continued long since 1603, as the scale of castle was huge.

Hikone Castle was built from the top to the foot of the mountain

The Main Tower, Main Hall and other turrets were built together, surrounded by stone walls, on the ridge of mountain to make it easy to protect. Deep ditches were dug around both edges of the ridge to avoid enemies’ invasions to the center of the castle. Moreover, five long-line stone walls were built along the slopes of the mountain to prevent the enemies from moving smoothly.

The main portion of the castle on the mountain, from the signboard at the site
The large ditch in front of the Taiko-yagura Turret
The long-line stone walls behind the Main Gate

The mountain was surrounded by tripled water moats and the Main Gate was built behind them. The gate was open to the southwest direction towards Osaka Castle where the Toyotomi Clan lived. Seri-kawa River flowed out of the moats in this direction, so it could have been the forth moat.

The illustration of Hikone Castle and Town, exhibited by Hikone Castle Museum
The past Main Gate drawn in the signboard at the site
The present Main Gate Ruins

It becomes Castle for Peaceful Time

The castle was completed in 1622, about twenty years after its launch. However, the situation dramatically changed in 1615 during the construction. The Tokugawa Shogunate defeated the Toyotomi Clan in that year. After that, the construction was done only by the Hikone Domain building houses for living and government. As a result, the new Main Hall for the lord was built at the foot of the mountain on the opposite side of the Main Gate. The gate to the hall was called the Front Gate just like a new Main Gate. The castle town was also developed around the castle. They were either connected to Biwa Lake through waterways or ponds for water transportation.

The restored Main Hall
The present Front Gate Ruins

Fortunately, no battles happened at Hikone Castle throughout the peaceful Edo Period. The lord of the castle, Ii Clan also played an important role in the central government as the head of hereditary feudal lords. Out of ten, five heads of the shogun’s council of elders came from the Ii Clan and it happened once in 265 years during that period. The most famous one is definitely Naosuke Ii at the end of the Edo Period. He decided to open more doors to foreign countries by signing the Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the US and Japan in 1858. However, he was unfortunately assassinated by the opposite Ronin outside the Sakurada-mon Gate of Edo Castle in 1860. This incident decreased the power and authority of the Tokugawa Shogunate and would be a trigger of the Meiji Restoration.

The portrait of Naosuke Ii, owned by Hikone Castle Museum (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The Sakurada-mon Gate of Edo Castle

To be continued in “Hikone Castle Part2”

50.彦根城 その1

幕府譜代筆頭、井伊氏の本拠地

立地と歴史

幕府が井伊氏を重要拠点に配置

彦根城は滋賀県の琵琶湖近くにあり、日本では最も人気のある歴史スポットの一つです。ここの天守は、現存12天守の一つであり、国宝5天守の一つでもあります。また、この城には5棟の重要文化財に指定されている建物もあります。城の主要部分も、これらの建物や石垣、その他の構造物とともにとてもよい状態で残っています。そのため、城がある区域は1956年以来、国の特別史跡に指定されています。

彦根城の現存天守(国宝)
彦根城の西の丸三重櫓(重要文化財)

徳川家康と石田三成の間で争われた1600年の関ヶ原の戦いの後、家康は天下人として日本の実権を握りました。家康は重臣の井伊直政を、三成が領していた琵琶湖沿いの地域の領主としました。直政は最初、三成が居城としてた山城の佐和山城にいたのですが、自身の居城としては不十分で、もっと強力かつ便利な城が必要と感じました。その当時は豊臣氏がまだ大坂城に健在で、更に西日本には、徳川ではなく豊臣が主君であると思っている大名が多くいました。彼らが結束して、家康が東日本に設立した徳川幕府を攻撃するかもしれなかったのです。直政の領地は、まさにその東日本への攻撃を防ぐための位置にあったのです。

城の位置

井伊直政肖像画、彦根城博物館蔵 (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

天下普請による築城

直政は1602年に亡くなってしまいますが、彼の息子、直継が新しい城の立地について家康に相談しました。そして、最終的には琵琶湖近くの約50mの高さがある低山上に城を築くことにしました。これが彦根城です。この城の建設は天下普請として行われ、10以上の他家の大名が合力しました。工事の完成を急ぐために、佐和山城など廃城となった城の廃材が活用されました。それでも城の規模が大きいため、1603年の開始以来、工事は長年に渡って続きました。

山上から山麓にかけて広がっている彦根城

城を守り易くするために、天守、御殿、櫓群がまとまって、且つそれらが石垣に囲まれ、山の峰上に築かれました。城の中心部分への敵の侵入を防ぐために、峰の両端周辺には深い堀切が掘られました。その上、5本の長い石垣(登り石垣)が山の斜面に築かれ、敵が(斜面の横方向を)スムースに動けないようにしました。

山上の城の中心部分(現地説明板より)
太鼓丸前の大堀切
大手門奥にある登り石垣

城の中心部分は三重の水堀に囲まれ、大手門はその堀を渡ったところに建てられました。大手門は、南西方向に向いており、その先には豊臣氏がいる大坂城がありました。この方角の堀の更に外側には芹川が流れており、4重目の堀ともいうべきものでした。

「彦根御城下惣絵図」(出展:彦根城博物館)
かつての大手門絵図(現地説明板より)
現在の大手門跡

平和な時代の城に転換

彦根城は、起工から約20年後の1622年に完成しました。ところが、工事期間中の1615年には状況が劇的に変わっていました。その年に徳川幕府が豊臣氏を滅ぼしたのです。その後、工事は彦根藩単独で行われ、居住や統治のための屋敷が作られました。その結果、城主のための御殿が、大手門とは反対側の山の麓に新たに築かれました。御殿に至る門は、まるで新しい大手門のごとく「表門」と呼ばれました。城の周辺には城下町も開発されました。城や町は、水上交通の便をよくするため、水路や内湖を通じて琵琶湖とつながっていました。

復元された御殿
現在の表門跡

幸いにして、平和であった江戸時代を通じて彦根城では戦さは起こりませんでした。城主であった井伊氏は、譜代大名筆頭として幕府中枢でも重要な役目を果たしました。265年間続いた江戸時代の間、10人しか任命されなかった大老の内、5人は井伊氏が輩出したのです。その中で一番有名なのは、何といっても幕末に大老となった井伊直弼でしょう。彼は、1858年に日米修好通商条約を結ぶことによって開国を推し進めました。ところが不幸にも、彼は1860年に江戸城の桜田門外において、反対派の浪人に暗殺されてしまいました。この事件により、徳川幕府の権力、権威は衰えることになり、明治維新へのきっかけとなったのです。

井伊直弼肖像画、彦根城博物館蔵 (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
江戸城桜田門

「彦根城その2」に続きます。

143.Mino-Kaneyama Castle Part3

The ruins were preserved as a public forest.

Features

Arriving at Main Enclosure

You will finally reach the Main Enclosure on the top. The enclosure is also partly surrounded by stone walls. The southwestern corner stone walls are said to be part of the base for the Main Tower. However, it is still uncertain if the castle had the tower.

The map around the castle

The imaginary drawing of the Southwestern corner Turret (or Main Tower?) in the past, from the signboard at the site
The present stone walls at the southwestern corner
The remaining stone walls around the Main Enclosure

The inside of the enclosure is a square now, but stone foundations and roof tiles for some buildings were discovered by researchers.

The imaginary drawing of the Main Enclosure in the past, from the signboard at the site
The present path to the Main Enclosure
The inside of the Main Enclosure
You can see some remaining stone foundations
The ruins of the original Main Enclosure entrance

From there, you can see great views of the Kiso-gawa River in the north and the Nobi Plain in the west, like the lord of the castle did in the past. You will also realize the castle had a good location.

A view of the Kiso-gawa River from the Main Enclosure in the north
A view of the Nobi Plain River from the Main Enclosure in the west

Later History

After Mino-Kaneyama Castle was abandoned, many of its stone walls were destroyed and its buildings were demolished as waste materials. In the Edo Period, the Owari Domain which owned the mountain including the ruins banned people from entering it. After the Meiji Restoration, the mountain was preserved as an Imperial Forest or a government-owned forest. Even after the castle was abandoned, it was still difficult for people to enter it many years later. The mountain was sold to the local government which is now Kani City. The city researched the ruins between 2006 and 2010 and found that they still have the features of a Shokuho style castle. The castle ruins were designated as a National Historic Site in 2013.

The monument for the mountain being sold to the local government

My Impression

When I visited the ruins of Mino-Kaneyama Castle, I pictured Tsuyama Castle which Tadamasa Mori finally built after he became the founder of the Tsuyama Domain in Mimasaka Province. Tsuyama Castle was built on a mountain with three tiers all surrounded by high stone walls. The castle was often considered impenetrable. I think Tsuyama Castle resembles Mino-Kaneyama Castle in the way that the stone walls were built. I also speculate that Tadamasa might have tried to build the strongest castle based on his experience of Mino -Kaneyama Castle.

The ruins of Tsuyama Castle

How to get There

I recommend using a car when you visit the castle ruins.
It is about a 15-minute drive away from Kani-Mitake IC on the Tokai-kanjo Expressway. There are several parking lots including the Barbican Enclosure around the ruins
If you want to use public transportation, you can take the YAO Bus from Akechi Station on Meitetsu-Hiromi Line and get off at the Moto-Keneyamacho-yakuba-mae bus stop. It takes about 15 minutes on foot from the bus stop to get there.
To get to Akechi Station from Tokyo or Osaka: Take the Tokaido Shinkansen super express, transfer to the Meitetsu-Inuyama Line at Nagoya Station and transfer to the Meitetsu-Hiromi Line at Inuyama Station or Shin-Kani Station.

The parking lot at the Barbican Enclosure

That’s all. Thank you.
Back to “Mino-Kaneyama Castle Part1”
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