137.Fukui Castle Part3

The castle ruins are still the center of Fukui Prefecture.

Features

Ruins of First Kitanosho Castle

I also recommend visiting the ruins of the first Kitanosho Castle which Katsuie Shibata built, about 300m away from Fukui Castle Ruins to the south. You can only see the base stones for the castle because Fukui Castle was built on the Kitanosho Castle Ruins.

The ruins of Kitanosho Castle in Echizen Province
These are the stone walls of Fukui Castle
The base stones of the first Kitanosho Castle

However, you can also see the statues of Katuie, his wife and his three daughters. These women are well-known in Japanese history. One of the daughters was the ruler, Hideyoshi Toyotomi’s wife. Another was the wife of Hidetada Tokugawa who was a little brother of Hideyasu Yuki, the founder of Fukui Castle.

The statue of Katsuie Shibata
The statue of Katsuie’s wife
The statues of the three sisters

Later History

After the Meiji Restoration, Fukui Castle was abandoned. All the buildings of the castle were demolished and all its area except for the center of the castle was turned into the city area. In 1873, the former lord of the castle, the Matsudaira Clan opened Matsudaira Agricultural Experimental Station in the center of the castle until it was moved to another in 1921. Instead, The Fukui Prefectural Office was moved to the Main Enclosure in 1923. Since then, the castle ruins have been the center of the local government like the castle used to be.

Matsudaira Agricultural Experimental Station (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
The buildings of the Fukui Prefectural Office (on the right) and Fukui prefectural police headquarters (on the left) at the Main Enclosure

My Impression

A Main Enclosure was usually the center of a castle. It often had the Main Tower and (or) the Main Hall to govern the area around in the Edo Period, like Fukui Castle. Many remaining Main Enclosures have now become historical parks, shrines, or facilities like a museum. However, the Main Enclosure of Fukui Castle is still used by the local government. I think this is the only example of the Main Enclosure being used for a prefectural office. Some people call it the strongest prefectural office in Japan.

The Main Enclosure of Fukuoka Castle (an example of being a historical park)
The Main Enclosure of Takaoka Castle (an example of being a shrine)
The Main Tower of the Main Enclosure of Osaka Castle (an example of being a museum)
The Fukui Prefectural Office which looks like the strongest

How to get There

If you want to visit there by car:
It is about 15 minutes away from Fukui IC on Hokuriku Expressway.
There are several parking lots around the ruins.
You can also use the underground parking lot of the prefectural office on weekdays.
(You need to have the parking ticket stamped at the reception counter.)
By public transportation, it takes less than 10 minutes walking from JR Fukui Station.
To get to Fukui Station from Tokyo: Take the Hokuriku Shinkansen super express, transfer to the limited express on the Hokuriku Line at Kanazawa Station.
From Osaka: Take the Thunderbird limited express.

Fukui Station

Links and References

Fukui Castle Ruins, Fukui Prefecture & Fukui Prefectural Tourism Federation

That’s all. Thank you.
Back to “Fukui Castle Part1”
Back to “Fukui Castle Part2”

137.福井城 その3

この城跡は、今も福井県の中心地であり続けています。

特徴、見どころ

初期の北ノ庄城跡

福井城から約300m南の方にある、柴田勝家が築いた北ノ庄城跡も訪れてみることをお勧めします。その城に関しては石垣の基礎部分(根石)しか見ることはできません。福井城がその北ノ庄城跡地の上に築かれたからです。

越前北ノ庄城址
こちらは福井城の石垣
初期北ノ庄城石垣の根石

しかし、他にも勝家、彼の妻(お市の方)、三人の娘(茶々、初、江)の銅像を見ることができます。この女性たちは日本の歴史で大変よく知られているのです。三姉妹の一人(茶々、後の淀殿)は天下人、豊臣秀吉の側室となりました。もう一人(江)は、福井城の創始者の結城秀康の弟、徳川秀忠の正妻となりました。

柴田勝家の銅像
勝家の妻(お市の方)の銅像
三姉妹(左から茶々、江、初)の銅像

その後

明治維新後、福井城は廃城となりました。城の全ての建物は撤去され、城の中心部を除く区域は市街地となっていきました。1873年、元城主であった松平氏は城の中心部に松平試農場を開設し、1921年に他に移動するまでそこに存在していました。1923年には、代わりに福井県庁が本丸に移ってきました。それ以来、城跡はかつて福井城がそうだったように、地方政府の中枢となっているのです。

松平試農城、福井県文書館蔵  (licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)
本丸にある県庁(右側)と県警本部(左側)の建物

私の感想

本丸は通常城の中心でした。そして江戸時代にはその周辺地を支配するために、そこには福井城のようにだいたい天守及び(または)御殿がありました。現存している本丸の多くは現在、歴史公園、神社、博物館のような施設のために使われています。ところが福井城の本丸は、今でも地方政府(県)によって使われているのです。私が思うに、本丸が県庁として使われている唯一の事例です。ある人は、このことを「日本で最強の県庁」と言ったりしています。

福岡城本丸(歴史公園となっている例)
高岡城本丸(神社となっている例)
大坂城本丸天守(博物館となっている例)
最強に見える福井県県庁

ここに行くには

車で行く場合:
北陸自動車道の福井ICから約15分かかります。
城跡周辺にいくつか駐車場があります。
平日には県庁の地下駐車場を使うこともできます。
(県庁受付で駐車券にスタンプを押してもらうことが必要です。)
公共交通機関を使う場合は、JR福井駅から歩いて10分以内で着きます。
東京から福井駅まで:北陸新幹線に乗って、金沢駅で北陸線の特急に乗り換えてください。
大阪からは:特急サンダーバード号に乗ってください。

福井駅

リンク、参考情報

福井城址、福井県公式観光サイト
・「結城秀康/志木沢郁著」学研M文庫
・「よみがえる日本の城8」学研

これで終わります。ありがとうございました。
「福井城その1」に戻ります。
「福井城その2」に戻ります。

137.Fukui Castle Part2

A park and office buildings stay together in the castle ruins.

Features

Still active Main Enclosure front gate

Now, the ruins of Fukui Castle have been used as a park and the ground for official buildings including the prefectural office. The area of the ruins is inside the Inner Moat including the Main Enclosure.

The aerial photo around the castle

The public workers commute by entering the front gate of the enclosure in the south, after crossing the Gohonjo Bridge over the Inner Moat, like the warriors of the Fukui Domain used to do. In the past, the front gate consisted of a defensive square space surrounded by two gate buildings and the stone walls, called Masugata. You can climb up to part of the remaining stone walls to look around the gate.

Going to the front gate of the enclosure by crossing the Gohonjo Bridge
The old photo of the front gate, from the signboard at the site
The present front gate
Climbing up to the top of the stone walls
The front gate seen from the top of the stone walls

Must-see Main Tower Base

You can walk around the inside of the Main Enclosure, but only outside the office buildings where the Main Hall was.

The ruins of the Main Enclosure are close to the office buildings

You should check out the remaining stone wall base for the Main Tower at the northwest corner of the enclosure. The base has two tiers, and the upper tier is for the large Main Tower and the small Main Tower. The stone walls look great but appear to have partially collapsed or are misaligned. This is due to the Fukui Earthquake in 1948.

The stone wall base for the Main Tower
The upper tier on which the large Main Tower was
The collapsing part of the stone walls

The restored well, called Fuku-no-i or the Fortune Well, is still on the lower tier. In fact, some people say the name of the well may be the origin of the castle’s later name, Fukui.

The restored Fortune Well

Restored Gate and Bridge

At the western entrance of the Main Enclosure near the base for the Main Tower, the gate building called Yamazatoguchi-gomon and the roofed Passage Bridge called Oroka-bashi over the Inner Moat were restored recently in the original method.

The restored Yamazatoguchi-gomon Gate and Oroka-bashi Bridge

The lord of the castle passed the original bridge and gate from his residence called Gozasho outside the enclosure to the Main Hall in the enclosure to govern the domain.

The old photo of the gate and roofed Passage Bridge, from the signboard at the site

You can try walking on the restored bridge and gate as well as entering the second floor of the gate to see its interior and an exhibition for the castle.

Crossing the roofed Passage Bridge
The Yamazatoguchi-gomon Gate
The interior of the second floor of the Yamazatoguchi-gomon Gate

Remaining Inner Moat and Main Enclosure stone walls

How about walking around the outside of the Inner Moat as well?

The Main Enclosure seen from the outside of the Inner Moat

For example, you can see the great stone walls for the Tatsumi-Yagura Turret at the southeast corner of the Main Enclosure. It was a three-story turret which was considered the substitute for the Main Tower after the tower was burned. The Main Enclosure originally had the Main Tower or turrets for its four corners.

The stone walls of the Tatsumi-Yagura Turret
The old photo of the Tatsumi-Yagura Turret, from the signboard at the site

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