103.Namioka Castle Part2

You can imagine how prosperous it was.

Features

Remaining Group of Enclosures

Now, the ruins of Namioka Castle has been developed as a historical park. Although you can’t see any buildings, the eight enclosure still remained. The park is very large and now sandwiched by the Prefectural Road 27 in the north and Namioka River in the south. If you stand alongside the river, you can also see that these enclosures are higher than the river. You can imagine how prosperous they were when their buildings were still there.

The aerial photo around the castle

Namioka River
Looking up the Inner Enclosure
Overlooking around Namioka River from the Inner Enclosure

Inner Enclosure which was center of castle

So far, two of the enclosures, the Inner Enclosure and the North Enclosure, were mainly excavated. The Inner Enclosure is at the center of the ruins and beside the river. The Inner Enclosure looks like the highest point in the castle ruins. It was found that it had the Main Hall for the lord of the castle. The inside of the enclosure is empty now, but a lot of cherry trees are planted at the outer edge. You can see the doubled dry moats partly with the restored wooden bridges. The moats were originally filled with water.

The Inner Enclosure
The entrance of the Inner Enclosure
The inside of the Inner Enclosure
The cherry trees which are planted at the outer edge
The doubled moat which is divided by the middle earthen walls

North Enclosure had residential lots for warriors

The North Enclosure is the largest enclosure and was found that it had been divided into several residential lots for the warriors. Each lot had the houses for the warriors, the workshop for the craftsmen, the well, the stable and so on. Through the excavation, they discovered that the enclosure had a defensive gate and had a zigzag road. You can now see the wooden fences that show how the residential lots were divided.

The North Enclosure
The entrance of the North Enclosure
The inside of the North Enclosure
The wooden fences which divide the residential lots
The miniature model of a typical residential lot, exhibited by the House in the Aomori-shi Middle Ages

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

103.浪岡城 その2

昔の姿を想像してみましょう。

特徴、見どころ

今も残る曲輪群

現在、浪岡城跡は歴史公園として整備されています。建物は何もありませんが、8つの曲輪はいまだに残っています。公園はとても大きく、今は北側の県道27号線と南の浪岡川に挟まれていて、曲輪は川よりも高い位置にあります。建物がそこにあったときにはどんなに栄えていたか想像できるでしょう。

城周辺の航空写真

浪岡川
内舘を見上げる
内舘から浪岡川の方を見渡す

城の中心だった内館

今までの所、内舘と北館の2つの曲輪が主に発掘されています。内館は城跡の中心であり、川沿いにあります。内館は城跡の中では最も高い位置にあるように見えます。そこには城主の御殿があったことがわかっています。現在はその曲輪の中は空になっていますが、外縁には多くの桜の木が植えられています。二重の空堀には、一部復元された木橋もかかっています。堀はもとは水に満たされていました。

内舘
内舘の入口
内舘の内部
外縁部に植えられている桜の木
中土塁によって二重になっている堀

武士の屋敷地だった北館

北館は最も大きな曲輪で、武士たちの屋敷地によって区切られていました。それぞれの屋敷地には、武士の館、職人の作業場、井戸、馬屋などがありました。発掘を通して、北館には防御のための門とジグザグ道があったことがわかっています。また、現在は木の柵によって、屋敷地がどのように区分されていたのか見学することができます。

北館
北館入口
北館内部
屋敷地を区分する木柵
典型的な屋敷地の復元模型(青森市中世の館で展示)

「浪岡城その3」に続きます。
「浪岡城その1」に戻ります。

103.Namioka Castle Part1

The Castle of ” Namioka Palace”

Location and History

Kitabatake Clan, Authority in Tohoku Region built Castle

Namioka Castle was located in what is now Aomori City in the middle of Aomori Prefecture. It is said that the Kitabatake Clan built the castle in the late 15th Century. The Kitabatake Clan was originally a noble family which supported the Southern Court in the 14th Century during the Period of the Northern and Southern Courts. The Southern Court sent Akiie Kitabatake to Tohoku Region to govern the region against the Northern Court. Akiie eventually returned to central Japan, while his relatives remained in Tohoku Region under the Nanbu Clan which also supported the Southern Court.

The illustration of Akiie Kitabatake, owned by Ryozan Shrine (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

In the first 15th Century during the Muromachi Period governed by the Ashikaga Shogunate, the Nanbu Clan and the Ando Clan often battled over the northern Tohoku Region around what is now Aomori Pref. However, they finally compromised each other and gave evidence for the peace in the late 15th Century. It is thought that The Kitabatake Clan was focused on and set up as a mediator at that time. The area around Namioka Castle was at the middle point between the territories of the Nanbu Clan in the east and the Ando Clan in the west.

The location of the castle

It was also a good place for transportation, so the castle prospered with trade. The authority of the Kitabatake Clan reached a peak in the first 16th Century, as the Imperial Court gave the clan a high court rank as a noble. The other clans in Tohoku Region respected the Kitabatake Clan and called the lord family of the clan “Namioka Palace”.

The imaginary drawing of Namioka Castle, exhibited by the House in the Aomori-shi Middle Ages

Group of Enclosures with certain features

Namioka Castle was on a hilly area alongside Namioka River, so its location was relatively defensive. The castle consisted of a group of enclosures called “Date” like the Nanbu Clan’s home base, Ne Castle. There were eight enclosures such as Uchi-date or the Inner Enclosure and Kita-date or the North Enclosure. The Inner Enclosure was probably the oldest one which was used as the Main Hall for the lord of the castle. The hall had a high-class reception hall called Kokonoma where the meeting between the lord and visitors would be held. The North Enclosure was the largest one in the castle where the warriors and craftsmen under the lord lived. The doubled or tripled water moats divided these enclosures. These moats have the middle earthen walls making the moat doubled which were used for defense in emergency and as a route in general.

The eight enclosures of Namioka Castle (from the signboard at the site)
The restored interior of the high-class reception hall, exhibited by the House in the Aomori-shi Middle Ages
The miniature model of the North Enclosure, exhibited by the House in the Aomori-shi Middle Ages

Castle was defeated by Tamenobu Oura

In 1562, an internal trouble among the Kitabatake Clan called the Kawahara Palace Rebellion happened. A relative family of the lord, called Kawahara Palace killed the lord, Tomokazu Kitabatake. Kawahara Palace was also defeated, as a result, the power of the clan declined. Tamenobu Oura, a relative of the Nanbu Clan aimed to be independent from the Nanbu Clan. Taking advantage of the rebellion, he defeated the Kitabatake Clan and captured Namioka Castle in 1578. He sent a local governor to Namioka Castle for a while, but the castle was abandoned when he built Hirosaki Castle in the first 17th Century.

The portrait of Tamenobu Oura, later Tamenobu Tsugaru, owned by Hirosaki Castle Tower (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The imaginary drawing of the fall of Namioka Castle, exhibited by the House in the Aomori-shi Middle Ages

To be continued in “Namioka Castle Part2”