153.Kitabatake Clan Hall Part2

Regarding the ruins of Kitabatake Clan Hall, visiting them starts from when you enter the Taki area. If you go on the steep Nigaki Mountain Pass to the ruins, it may give you a good understanding of how the hall was protected by this natural hazard.

How to get There

Regarding the ruins of Kitabatake Clan Hall, visiting them starts from when you enter the Taki area. The current roads to the area have been developed and paved for the convenience of transportation, but some of them are narrow and winding mountain passes. For example, if you want to visit the ruins going on National Road 368 (the former Ise Main Road) by car from the west, it is easy because the road has been developed through Kaisaka Tunnel into the mountain beside the area.

The map around the Taki area with the current 7 entrances

The Kaisaka Tunnel
The old Ise Road to the steep Kaisaka Mountain Pass goes along it

However, if you go from the east, you may find it troubling. The road still goes on the steep Nigaki Mountain Pass and becomes narrow and zigzagged. It may give you a good understanding of how the hall was protected by this natural hazard. Please be careful when passing each other. It about an hour or 40km drive away from Matsusaka IC on the Ise Expressway. The severe mountain pass area is about 5km long. If you want to go on an easier route from the IC, you can take the Mie Prefectural Road 43 from the north to the ruins.

The National Road 368 on the Nigaki Mountain Pass

If you want to use public transportation, take the Tsu City Community Bus (the Misugi-higashi or Misugi-junkan route) from Ise-Okutsu Satation and get off at the Kitabatake-jinja-mae bus stop. Be careful the buses only run on weekdays and there few of them.
From Tokyo to Ise-Okutsu Station: take the Tokaido Shinkansen super express, transfer to the Mie rapid train or the Kintetsu Railway at Nagoya Station, and transfer to the JR Meisho Line at Matsusaka Station.

Features

Hall becomes Kitabatake Shrine

The ruins of Kitabatake Clan Hall has turned into the Kitabatake Shrine since the Edo Period. The shrine was built on where the hall had been built, so it looks like a typical shrine, not a hall or castle. The only remaining item of the hall is the Kitabatake Clan Hall Ruins Garden in the southern part of the shrine. The garden is a pond garden with a circular promenade which is said that Takakuni Hosokawa, the shogun’s deputy designed and Harutomo Hatakeyama, the seventh lord of the clan first built. It looks very beautiful and sophisticated and is considered one of the three greatest Samurai gardens and was designated as a National Place of Scenic Beauty.

The map around the hall

The entrance of the shrine
The front shrine hall
it doesn’t look like hall or castle ruins.
The Kitabatake Clan Hall Ruins Garden
Ichijodani Asakura Clan Garden, another greatest Samurai garden

Earliest Stone Walls used for Warriors’ Halls during Middle Ages

There is a signboard which shows the excavated stone walls of the original hall and says they are the earliest example of stone walls used for warriors’ halls during the Middle Ages. However, we can’t look at them directly, as they have been buried again after they were excavated. The stone walls were first built around the upper tier of the hall’s land where the Main Hall for the lord was probably built. In fact, the stone walls were buried by the Kitabatake Clan themselves to extend the tier. The Main Hall was rebuilt on the tier, which would be the final version of the hall. That means the stone walls ruins are just inside of the current shrine so that visitors usually can’t see them.

The explanation board for the stone walls
You can’t see the excavated items

Final Castle Ruins

If you want to see what looks like castle ruins, you should consider visiting the final castle of the hall and/or Kiriyama Castle. They are on the same route and the final castle is not so far from the hall. Therefore, you can choose which one or both depending on your schedule. If you walk on the path south of the shrine, you will find the starting point of the route to the ruins. There is a zigzagging trail to the mountains, so you will need to hike.

The path to the starting point
The starting point

You will first reach the ruins of the final castle, on the mountain about 80m above the shrine (the former hall). The ruins simply have the main enclosure and the belt enclosure around. You can see the top of the shrine and the area around there. You will understand the place must have been the refuge shelter for the people living in the hall. The trail goes beside the belt enclosure to Kiriyama Castle Ruins ahead over the western ditch.

Climbing the trail
You can see the roof of the shrine below on the way
A view of the area around
The ruins of the final castle
The trail goes to Kiriyama Castle Ruins

To be continued in “Kitabatake Clan Hall Part3”
Back to “Kitabatake Clan Hall Part1”

153.北畠氏館 その2

北畠氏館跡に関しては、多気地域に足を踏み入れた瞬間から館跡への訪問が始まっていると言えます。今でも険しい仁柿峠を通れば、自然の障壁によって館がいかに守られていたか理解できるでしょう。

ここに行くには

北畠氏館跡に関しては、多気地域に足を踏み入れた瞬間から館跡への訪問が始まっていると言えます。多気への現在の道路は交通の便のために整備され、舗装されてはいます。しかし、その中には今でも狭かったり、峠を曲がりくねりながら通っているものもあります。例えば、国道368号線(以前の伊勢本街道)を車で通って館跡に行こうとする場合、西から入るときは簡単です。多気地域に接する山に飼坂トンネルが通っているからです。

多気地域の地図、現代の7箇所の出入口を示しています

飼坂トンネル
険しい飼坂峠への道(伊勢本街道)も並行しています

ところが東から入ろうとすると、困難に感じるかもしれません。道は今でも険しい仁柿(にがき)峠を通っていて、狭くジグザグになっているからです。この自然の障壁によって館がいかに守られていたか理解することにもなるでしょう。すれ違いのときには気を付けてください。伊勢自動車道の松坂ICから約1時間、距離にして40kmほどの道のりになります。そのうち、険しい峠の部分は約5kmです(この部分は「酷道」と言われています)。松坂ICからもっと容易な道を通って行きたい場合は、北の方から三重県道43号線を通るという手段もあります。

仁柿峠を通る「酷道」368号線

公共交通機関を使う場合は、伊勢奥津駅から津市コミュニティバス(美杉東線か美杉循環線)に乗って、北畠神社前バス停で降りてください。このバスは平日のみの運航で、本数も少ないので注意してください。
東京から伊勢奥津駅まで:東海道新幹線に乗って、名古屋駅で快速みえ(JR)か近鉄線に乗り換え、松坂駅でJR名松線に乗り換えてください。

特徴、見どころ

館跡はそのまま北畠神社に

北畠氏館跡は、江戸時代から北畠神社となっています。この神社は館があったその場所に建てられているので、見た目は神社そのものであり、館や城のようには見えません。ただし神社の南側には、館関連で唯一残っている北畠氏館跡庭園があります。この庭園は回遊式の池泉庭園で、幕府の管領であった細川高国が設計し、7代目の北畠氏当主が造園したと言われています。とても美しく、洗練されていて、日本三大武将庭園の一つとされています。国の名勝にも指定されています。

館周辺の地図

神社入口
神社の拝殿
城跡、館跡という感じではありません
北畠氏館跡庭園
三大武将庭園の一つ、一乗谷朝倉氏庭園(諏訪館跡庭園)

武士の城館のものとしては最古の石垣

神社内の説明板には、オリジナルの館の石垣が発掘されたことと、中世の(武士の)館や城で使われたものとしては日本最古であると記載されています。しかしその石垣を直接見学することはできません。発掘された後埋め戻されてしまったと思われるからです。この石垣は最初は館の敷地の最上段を囲んで築かれ、恐らくはその上に領主の御殿がありました。そして実は、北畠氏自身がその上段部分を拡張するため、石垣を埋めてしまっていたのです。御殿は新しく出来た上段に再建され、それが館の最終形となりました。つまり、石垣の遺構は現在の神社の内部にあるため、ビジターは通常見ることはできないということになったのでしょう。

石垣についての説明板
発掘されたものを見ることはできません

詰めの城跡

もし城跡らしいものをご覧になりたいのでしたら、詰めの城、霧山城の両方かどちらかに行ってみてはいかがでしょうか。両方とも同じルート上にあって、しかも詰めの城の方は館からそんなに遠くありません。片方だけにするか両方にするかはご都合次第でいいと思います。神社の南にある小道を通って行くと、城跡への登山口が見えてきます。曲がりくねった山道になりますので、山歩き用の準備は必要です。

登山口に向かう小道
登山口

まず最初に、詰めの城の跡地に到着します。ここは神社(以前館だった所)から約80m高い位置にあります。この城跡はシンプルで、主郭部とその周りの腰曲輪から構成されています。来る途中では神社の屋根が見えたり、城跡からは周辺地域を見渡すことができます。この場所は館に住んでいた人たちが何かあったときに避難する場所だったのだろうと理解できます。山道は腰曲輪沿いに進み、西側の堀切を越えて霧山城跡の方に向かいます。

山道を登っていきます
途中で神社の屋根が見えます
周辺の景色
詰めの城跡
霧山城跡に向かう山道

「北畠氏館その3」に続きます。
「北畠氏館その1」に戻ります。

153.Kitabatake Clan Hall Part1

The lord of the Kitabatake Clan reigned at the clan’s hall, called the Taki Palace. The hall had a great Japanese garden which still remains. The group eventually became a great warlord clan in the early 16th Century.

Location and History

Southern Court Noble family becomes Warlord

Kitabatake Clan Hall was the home base of the Kitabatake Clan which governed Ise Province which is the modern day Mie Prefecture between the 14th and the 16th Centuries. The clan was a unique lord’s family who was originally a noble but finally became a warlord until they were taken over by Nobunaga Oda. Kitabatake Clan Hall was also uniquely located in the Taki area which was inconvenient but defensive so that clan was able to survive for a long time.

The range of Ise Province and the location of the castle

In the Period of Northern and Southern Courts during the 14th Century, Emperor Godaigo of the Southern Court sent his trusted vassal, Chikafusa Kitabatake to eastern Japan to govern the region. Chikafusa and his son, Akiie fought against the lords of the Northern Court, as a general. As a result, their relatives in the Tohoku Region remained as a noble birth lord family, called Namioka Palace, which lived in Namioka Castle until the late 16th Century. Similarly, Akiie’s little brother, Akiyoshi was sent to Ise Province and he was assigned as its Governor in 1338. Ise Province consisted of the eastern part facing the sea and having Ise Grand Shrine, one of the most important shrines for the Imperial family, and the western part of mountain areas having the routes to Yoshino in Yamato Province (now Nara Pref.), the home of the Southern Court.

The portrait of Emperor Godaigo, owned by Shojokoji Temple (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The statue of Akiie Kitabatake in Kitabatake Shrine
The ruins of Namioka Castle

The Kitabatake Clan in Ise Province also battled the Northern Court and eventually chose their home at a place in the defensive western part, which would be the Taki area. The area was on the way to the Ise Main Road connecting Ise Grand Shrine and Yamato Province, which was considered important. However, it was a small basin along the Yatemata River, surrounded by mountains. There were 7 entrances to the area, which were all on steep mountain passes or deep valleys. That meant the area itself was very defensive.

The relief map of the Taki area with its 7 entrances

The sitting statue of Akiyoshi Kitabatake, exhibited by Misugi Home Museum  (licensed via Wikimedia Commons)

Unfortunately, the Southern Court eventually declined and the Ashikaga Shogunate supporting the Northern Court was established. The Kitabatake Clan somehow managed to survive, however, they sometimes opposed the shogunate about how to treat the descendants of the Southern Court. The clan first built their hall in a land surrounded by the Yatemata and the other two rivers in three directions and mountains in the west. The land was leveled to three tiers, the upper one was about 3m above the middle one and surrounded by long stone walls, so it seemed that the Main Hall was built on the upper tier. These stone walls are thought as one of the earliest ones built for warriors’ halls or residences. They were piled vertically using natural oval-shaped river stones, unlike typical stone walls for castles later, piled with a slant, using processed stones.

The excavated stone walls of the upper tier

Castles are built to protest Hall

The shogunate troops sometimes attacked the territory of the Kitabatake Clan from the west. As a result, the clan started to build new castles in that direction to protect their hall. They first built the final castle for emergencies on a mountain about 80m above the hall. It had a simple main enclosure on the top and belt enclosures around with passes. The western edge of the mountain was cut by a deep ditch where only the narrow earthen bridge could be used.

The relief map around the castle

The layout of the final castle, from the signboard at the site, adding the red English letter
The ruins of the final castle

The clan also built a larger castle over the pass towards the west, called Kiriyama Castle. The castle was located on another mountain about 160m above the final castle, which was much harder to access for enemies as well as defenders. Therefore, the castle seemed to be used as a lookout usually and for being besieged in cases of emergency. As a result, the clan was able to prevent the enemies from invading the Kitabatake’s territory.

The ruins of Kiriyama Castle

Prosperity and Destruction of Kitabatake Clan

After that, the clan and the shogunate made peace with each other, which made the government of the clan in Ise Province stable. Their several branch clans, such as the Kozukuri Clan, were sent to various places of the province and the lord of the Kitabatake Clan reigned at the clan’s hall, called the Taki Palace. The hall was also expanded to have a great Japanese garden which still remains. The group eventually became a great warlord clan in the early 16th Century and its influence reached the peak in the middle of the century when the 7th lord, Tomonori Kitabatake was the lord.

The remaining Kitabatake Clan Hall Ruins Garden
The portrait of Tomonori Kitabatake, owned by Iseyoshida Library (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

However, a new threat came from Owari Province, north of Ise. Nobunaga Oda, who would later be the ruler of Japan, started to invade Ise Province in 1568. Moreover, the relative Kozukuri Clan turned supporting Nobunaga. Tomonori had to move to his home from the hall to Okochi Castle near the battle fields. The Kitabatake and Oda Clans made peace in 1569 under the terms of Nobunaga’s son, Nobukatsu being adopted as the Kitabatake Clan’s successor. This was actually the starting point of taking the Kitabatake Clan over by the Oda Clan. Tomonori was finally killed by Nobukatsu in 1576. The castles in Ise Province, including Kitabatake Clan Hall, were captured by the Oda’s troops at the same time.

The portrait of Nobunaga Oda, attributed to Soshu Kano, owned by Chokoji Temple, in the late 16th century (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The portrait of Nobukatsu Oda, owned by Sokenji Temple (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

To be continued in “Kitabatake Clan Hall Part2”