91.Shimabara Castle Part2

The castle looks like a battleship.

Features

You can feel power of nature

Shimabara City, which owns Shimabara Castle, is located on the skirts of Mt. Unzen. If you walk around the city area, you will notice the particular geography. The hill called Moritake, where Shimabara Castle was built, was created by the explosion of Mt. Mayuyama about 4,000 years ago. You can feel the power of nature there. If you also walk around the castle, it conserved its appearance with the great stone walls surrounded by the Inner Moat and some restored castle buildings. In particular, the high stone walls remain in good condition, so you can see the line of the walls is folded like a folding screen. The castle may be compact, but strongly built, looking like a battleship.

walking on the slope of the skirt from the city area to the castle
The remaining high stone walls
Shimabara Castle looks like a battleship

Collaboration of remaining Stone Walls and rebuilt Buildings

The area inside the original Inner Moat, including the Main and Second Enclosures, is designated as a historic site by Nagasaki Prefecture and is developed as a historical park. If you drive to the castle site, you can easily enter the Main Enclosure by crossing the earthen bridge, built in the present time, and park inside it.

The aerial photo around the castle

The entrance of the Main Enclosure
The inside of the Main Enclosure

Great View from rebuilt high Main Tower

The rebuilt five-level Main Tower stands out with its 33-meter height, the third tallest existing Main Tower in Japan. It is actually a modern building used as a museum and observation platform. Inside the tower, you can learn more about the history of the castle and the Shimabara Rebellion. On the top floor, you can enjoy see a great 360-degree view of the city. For example, Mt. Aso on Kyushu Island over Ariake Sea in the east. The Main, Second and Third Enclosures form in a line in the north. You can also see Mt. Mayuyama with Mt. Unzen behind it in the west.

The rebuilt Main Tower
A view of the eastern side from the tower
A view of the northern side from the tower
A view of the western side from the tower

Exhibition of rebuilt Turret

The Main Enclosure has more attractions. The three rebuilt turrets also have distinct exhibitions. For example, one of the turrets, called Tatsumi Turret, is used as an art gallery dedicated to a local famous sculptor, Seibo Kitamura. You can see his representative statue works such as the Peace Statue (the reduced version of that in Nagasaki Peace Park) inside. You can even see his other works outside such as the statues of Shiro Amakusa, who led the Shimabara Rebellion, and a young Nobunaga Oda, who was a great warlord in central Japan.

Going to the rebuilt Tatsumi Turret
The Peace Statue
The statue of Shiro Amakusa
The statue of young Nobunaga Oda

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

91.島原城 その2

戦艦のように見える城

特徴、見どころ

自然の力を感じる町と城

島原城がある島原市は、雲仙岳の裾野に位置しています。市街地周辺を歩いてみると、その地理的な特徴がよくわかると思います。島原城が築かれた森岳と呼ばれる丘陵も、約4千年前の眉山の崩壊により形作られたのです。そこでは、自然の力を身をもって感じることができます。また、城の周りを歩いてみると、内堀に囲まれた素晴らしい石垣と、復元された城の建物により、その外観がよく保たれています。特にこの高石垣は、よい状態で残っていて、石垣のラインは屏風のように折れ曲がっています。この城の大きさはコンパクトかもしれませんが、強力に作られていて、まるで戦艦のように見えます。

市街地から裾野の坂を登って城に向かいます
現存している高石垣
戦艦のような島原城

現存石垣と再建建物とのコラボ

本丸と二の丸を含む、現存している内堀の中の範囲は、長崎県の史跡に指定され、歴史公園として整備されています。車で城に行く場合には、現代になって作られた土橋を渡って、簡単に本丸の中に入っていき、その中にある駐車場に停めることができます。

城周辺の航空写真

本丸入口
本丸内部

再建高層天守からの素晴らしい眺め

再建された5層の天守は高さが33mあり、とても目立っています。日本で存在している天守の中では3番目の高さです。この天守は実際には近代的ビルであり、博物館と展望台として使われています。天守の中では、城の歴史や島原の乱のことを学ぶことができます。最上階では、島原市の全方位の素晴らしい景色を楽しむことができます。例えば、東の方には有明海の向こうに阿蘇山が望めます。北側には本丸と二の丸が一直線に並んでいるのが見えます。また、西側には眉山とその背後の雲仙岳が見えます。

再建天守
天守からの眺め(東側)
城からの眺め(北側)
城からの眺め(西側)

再建された櫓での展示

本丸には他にも見どころがあります。3基の再建された櫓はそれぞれ特徴ある展示を行っています。例えばその内の一つ、巽(たつみ)櫓は、地元の有名な彫刻家である北村西望(せいぼう)の作品を集めたギャラリーになっています。その中では、彼の代表的作品である平和祈念像(長崎平和公園にあるものの縮小版)などがあります。櫓の外でも彼の他の作品、島原の乱を率いた天草四郎や、日本の中心部で有力な戦国大名となった若き日の織田信長の銅像を見学できます。

再建された巽櫓に向かいます
平和祈念像
天草四郎像
若き日の織田信長像

「島原城その3」に続きます。
「島原城その1」に戻ります。

91.Shimabara Castle Part1

A castle sharing the fate of the Shimabara Rebellion

Location and History

Matsukura Clan builds Castle as their Home base

Shimabara Castle is located in the Shimabara Peninsula, the western part of the Kyushu Region. The Arima Clan basically governed the area around the peninsula in the Middle Ages. Harunobu Arima, the lord of the clan in the late 16th Century, was known as a Christian feudal lord. Because of that, Christianity spread around the peninsula greatly. However, he was punished by the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1612. His son was also transferred to another place in 1614. After that, Shigemasa Matsukura was appointed to the lord of the Shimabara Domain by the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1616. He first lived in Hinoe Castle, where the Arima Clan lived, but soon decided to build a new castle as his home base, known as Shimabara Castle and completed in 1624.

The location of the castle

The replica of the statue of Harunobu Arima, exhibited by Arima Christian Heritage Museum, the original statue is owned by Daiunji Temple

The Shimabara Domain was a relatively a small domain which earned 43,000 koku of rice. However, the castle was said to be worth that of a domain with 100,000 koku of rice. That meant the people in the Shimabara Domain suffered high taxes and worked hard to build the castle. The castle had three enclosures in a line from the south to the north. The Main and Second Enclosures were in the Inner Moat and both were connected by only the roofed Passage Bridge called Roka-bashi. If enemies from the outside wanted to attack the Main Enclosure, they had to first enter the entrance of the Second Enclosure.

Part of Illustration of Shimabara Castle and environs with my comments, owned by Kumamoto Prefectural Library, exhibited by Shimabara Castle
The ruins of the roofed Passage Bridge

High Stone Walls and Five leveled Main Tower

All the enclosures were also surrounded by zigzagging high stone walls allowing the defenders to eliminate blind spots and make a flank attack. In particular, the Main Enclosure had the Main Tower and eleven turrets. The Main Tower had five levels and was built in a typical method called Multi-storied type. Other Main Towers in other castles usually had decorations such as gables and bell-shaped windows. The Main Tower of Shimabara Castle simply had square floors diminishing towards the top with minimal roofing. This method made building the tower more efficient and also easy to protect.

The zigzagging high stone walls
The restored Multi-storied type Main Tower

Shimabara Rebellion occurs due to Matsukura Clan’s oppression

Shigemasa oppressed the people in his territory with heavy taxes to have more income. After the Tokugawa Shogunate banned people from being Christians, he tortured them if they didn’t convert. His way seemed to be loyal to the shogunate. After he died in 1630, his son, Katsuie rapidly followed in his father’s footsteps. People, including the Christians in Shimabara Peninsula, were angry and started the Shimabara Rebellion in 1637. They first attacked Shimabara Castle. They were professionally trained by the masterless warriors who were former retainers of the Arima Clan. Katsuie was not in the castle but in Edo, however, his retainers repelled the uprising army. The castle ironically proved its strength by fighting against the citizens.

The figures showing Matsukura Clan’s oppression, exhibited by Arima Christian Heritage Museum
Otemon Battle in Shimabara Uprising, exhibited by Shimabara Castle

The uprising people were defeated after they were besieged in Hara Castle for three months. The shogunate banned the Matsukura Clan from ruling over the Shimabara Domain. Katsuie Matsukura was executed due to his misgovernment. After that, several clans governed the domain and Shimabara Castle by the end of the Edo Period. In 1792, when the Matsudaira Clan governed, a great natural disaster known as Shimabara Taihen happened. An earthquake and eruption from Mt. Unzen caused the collapse of Mt. Mayuyama in front of it. The debris flowing from the mountain killed a lot of people and the castle was also partly destroyed by the earthquake.

Part of the folding screens of Shimabara Rebellion, owned by Asakura City Akizuki Museum, from the exhibition of Arima Christian Heritage Museum
The ruins of Hara Castle
A drawing of Shimabara Taihen, exhibited by Shimabara Castle

To be continued in “Shimabara Castle Part2”