142.Naegi Castle Part2

The castle ruins integrate stone walls and natural rocks.

Features

Going to Center from Entrance

Today, no castle buildings remain in the ruins of Naegi Castle, but you can still see the spectacular foundation mixing stone walls and natural rocks. Just after you enter the entrance of the ruins, you can see a great expansive view of the top of the mountain with the observation platform from the ruins of the soldiers’ barracks.

The map around the castle

The diorama of Naegi Castle Ruins, from the signboard at the site
The entrance of the ruins
The ruins of the soldiers’ barracks
An expansive view of the ruins
The imaginary drawing of the castle in the past at the site

Then, if you walk to the center of the ruins along the mixed walls of natural rocks and stones, you will reach the Third Enclosure. This enclosure had originally been a deep dry moat for defense but was eventually filled to make more land for buildings later.

The mixed walls of natural rocks and stones
Going to the center of the ruins
A view of the Third Enclosure from the top of the Large Turret

Large Turret Ruins, and going to Top of Mountain

There are the ruins of the Large Turret in the front, which is the remaining base of huge rocks and stone walls. You can climb up to the top of the base to see the top of the mountain closer.

The ruins of the Large Turret
A view of the center of the ruins from the Large Turret Ruins
A view of the Large Turret Ruins from the center of the ruins

To climb up to the top of the mountain, you will need to walk on a narrow and zigzagging route alongside the rocky terrain. You will also see a lot of ruins of gates and buildings as you go. That means those buildings were crowded in such a small space in the past.

The ruins of the Sakashita-mon Gate
The ruins of the Armoury
The ruins of the Entrance Floor Gate
The imaginary drawing of around the route to the top in the past, from the signboard at the site

You will finally arrive at the Main Enclosure on the top. It is now empty, but you may feel it’s not large. There were also some buildings such as the living quarters for the lord.

The Main Enclosure on the top

Observation Platform, no less than real Main Tower

The base for the Main Tower is a huge rock itself on the top and the observation platform is on it instead of the historical tower. The platform was built using the method of Kake-zukuri like the original tower. The columns of it use the same post holes on the rock as the tower, so you can easily imagine how great it was.

The former Main Tower
The observation platform in on the huge rock as the base
The platform was built using the Kake-zukuri method
The column uses the same post hole on the rock as the Main Tower

Moreover, the deck of the platform has the same size and level as the top floor of the original tower. You can enjoy the same great view of the area around, including the Kiso River, Nakatsugawa city and the mountains behind, just as the lord did back then.

The deck of the platform
A view from the platform

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

142.苗木城 その2

石垣と自然石が融合している城跡

特徴、見どころ

城跡の入口から中心部へ

現在、苗木城跡には建物は残っていませんが、石垣と自然石を組み合わせた壮大な城の基礎部分を今でも見ることができます。まず、城跡の入口から入ったすぐ後の足軽長屋跡から、展望台がある山頂のすばらしい遠景が見えてきます。

城周辺の地図

城跡のジオラマ、現地説明板より
城跡入口
足軽長屋跡
城跡の遠景
現地にあるかつての城の想像図

それから、自然石と加工された石が混ざったような壁沿いに、城跡の中心に向かって歩いていくと、三の丸の着きます。この曲輪の場所には、もともと防御のための深い空堀があったのですが、後に建物の敷地を増やすために埋められました。

自然石と石垣が混在している壁面
城跡の中心部へ
大矢倉跡から見た三の丸

大矢倉跡、そして山頂へ

その手前は大矢倉跡で、巨石と石垣を組み合わせた台座が残っています。その天辺まで登っていくと、山の頂がもっと間近に見えます。

大矢倉跡
大矢倉跡から見た城跡中心部
城跡中心部から見た大矢倉跡

山頂に登っていくためには、岩肌に沿った狭く曲がりくねった通路を歩いて行く必要があります。その道沿いには、多くの門や建物の跡があります。過去には、このような狭いスペースに建物がひしめき合っていたのです。

坂下門跡
武器蔵跡
玄関口門跡
山頂に至る通路付近のかつての城の想像図、現地説明板より

そして、ついに山頂の本丸に到着します。そこは今はなにもありませんが、それでも広いとは感じないと思います。かつては城主の居間などいくつかの建物がありました。

山頂の本丸

本物の天守にも劣らない展望台

天守台は、そこにある巨石そのものであり、かつての天守の代わりに今では展望台がその上に乗っています。その展望台も、元の天守と同じように懸け造りで作られています。その柱は、天守と同じ柱穴を使って立てられています。天守がどんなに素晴らしかったか、容易に想像することができます。

元天守だった場所
展望台が天守台の岩の上に乗っています
懸け造りの展望台
柱は天守と同じ柱穴を使っています

その上、展望台のデッキは元の天守の最上階と同じ大きさ、高さに設定されています。そこからは、木曽川や中津川市街を含む周辺地域の絶景を楽しむことができます。きっと城主も同じ景色を眺めていたことでしょう。

展望台のデッキ
展望台からの眺め

「苗木城その3」に続きます。
「苗木城その1」に戻ります。

142.Naegi Castle Part1

A rare castle which was built and maintained on the rocky mountain

Location and History

Castle monitoring Nakasendo Road

The Nakasendo Road is known for being one of the major roads in Japan and was designated as one of the Five Major Roads in the Edo Period. In particular, the road was the most useful one when large amount of troops moved between western and eastern Japan before the period. The area of what is now Nakatsugawa City in the eastern part of Gifu Prefecture had Nakatsugawa Post Town in a basin at the center with the road going to mountain areas in the east. That’s why the warlords in the Sengoku Period wanted to own the area to monitor this important spot on the road. Naegi Castle was built on Takamori Mountain beside Kiso River which was sandwiched by the castle and the town. That meant the castle was the most suitable for monitoring what happened on Nakasendo Road.

The location of the castle

The relief map around the castle

”Nakatsugawa” from the series “Kiso-kaido Road” attributed to Hiroshige Utagawa in the Edo Period (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

Toyama Clan builds and somehow maintains Castle till end

In the 16th Century during the Sengoku Period, The Toyama Clan was one of the local warlord families in the area, which was called the eastern Mino Province. It is said that the clan first built the castle in the first part of the16th Century as a branch castle of their home base, Iwamura Castle. However, the clan was affected by other larger warlords such as the Takeda and Oda Clans which also wanted to own the area. For example, both the Takeda and Oda Clans battled each other between 1572 and 1582, gaining and losing this castle.

The ruins of Iwamura Castle
The Portrait of Katsuyori Takeda, the lord of the clan at that time, owned by Koyasan Jimyoin (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The portrait of Nobunaga Oda, the lord of the clan at that time, attributed to Soshu Kano, owned by Chokoji Temple, in the late 16th century (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

After the declines of both, the Mori Clan, under the ruler Hideyoshi Toyotomi captured the castle. Tomomasa Toyama, with his father Tomotada, the lord of the castle at that time, had to escape from the castle to Ieyasu Tokugawa at Hamamatsu Castle. In 1600 when the Battle of Sekigawara occurred, Tomomasa succeeded in getting Naegi Castle back with Ieyasu’s approval. After Ieyasu established the Tokugawa Shogunate, the Toyama Clan governed the castle again as the Naegi Domain until the end of the Edo Period.

The present Hamamatsu Castle
The portrait of Tomomasa Toyama, the founder of the Naegi Domain, owned by Naegi Toyama Historical Museum (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

Castle on Rocky Mountain, Main Tower on Huge Rock

Naegi Castle had a very special location as far as permanent castles in Japan go. The mountain the castle is located on has a rocky terrain and steep cliffs. It was good for the defenders to make very difficult to attack, but if the lord of the castle wanted to develop it, there would be few spaces to do so. Generally, buildings or inter routes of castles were built on stone walls surrounding natural terrain or stone wall bases at that time. However, in the case of Naegi Castle, it was difficult to cut the rocky surface for buildings or routes. As a result, they were built on bases mixed with natural rocks and stone walls or filled valleys. Even if more buildings were needed, they were built on natural rocks directly. For example, the Main Tower of the castle was built on the huge rock on the top of the mountain.

The base of the Large Turret of Naegi Castle, which is mixed with natural rocks and stone walls
The huge rock as the base of the Main Tower of Naegi Castle

Traditionally, when Japanese people wanted to build a building on natural rocks, they used a method called Kake-zukuri. The method is to build the foundation by combining many columns and horizontal beams like lattices on a steep rock or cliff. Buildings using this method have still been seen in some old shrines and temples like Kiyomizu-dera Temple in Kyoto. It is said the reason for using this method is that the mountains themselves, which have the rocks or cliffs, are the objects of worship. When many castles were built during the Sengoku and the first part of the Edo Period, the method was applied to castles. Naegi Castle is a good example, and another case in Sendai Castle is known.

The Main Hall of Kiyomizu-dera Temple, built using the Kake-zukuri method
The ruins of Sendai Castle

The Naegi Domain earned only 10 thousand koku of rice which was a minimum amount for an independent lord. Because of this, their castle buildings had wood shingle roofing and wood siding or mud walls, not roof tiles and plaster walls which were too expensive for them. However, they built and maintained these buildings under such severe conditions even during the long lasting peace of the Edo Period. This was because staying there to be ready for any emergency was their most important duty.

The imaginary drawing of Naegi Castle, from the signboard at the site

To be continued in “Naegi Castle Part2”