Sannohe Castle

Sannohe Castle (三戸城, Sannohe-jō) was a Muromachi period Japanese castle located in what is now the town of Sannohe, in Sannohe District of Aomori Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region of far northern Japan. It was located on a river terrace of the Mabechi River, which formed part of its natural defenses.

Sannohe Castle
三戸城
Sannohe, Aomori Prefecture, Japan
reconstructed donjon of Sannohe Castle
Sannohe Castle
三戸城
Sannohe Castle
三戸城
Coordinates40°22′52″N 141°15′51″E
Typehirayama-style Japanese castle
Site information
Open to
the public
yes
Conditionreconstructed donjon
Site history
Built1558-1564
Built byNanbu Harumasa
In useMuromachi to Sengoku periods
Demolished1634

History

The actual date of Sannohe Castle’s foundation is unknown; however, it was one of a series of fortifications established by the Nanbu clan in the late Kamakura period or early Muromachi period when the clan relocated its seat from Kai Province to Mutsu Province and started to secure its control over the frontier Nukanobu District. The clan residence remained at nearby Shōjujidate Castle in what is now the town of Nanbu until that fortified house was destroyed in an uprising in June 1539. The 24th hereditary chieftain of the clan, Nanbu Harumasa, relocated his seat to nearby Sannohe Castle.

After the death of Nanbu Harumasa in 1582, the clan split into several competing factions. In 1590, the Sannohe faction led by Nanbu Nobunao organized a coalition of most of the Nambu clans and pledged allegiance to Toyotomi Hideyoshi at the Siege of Odawara. In return, he was recognized as chieftain of the Nanbu clans, and confirmed as daimyō of his existing holdings in the northern districts of Mutsu Province. However, Kunohe Masazane, leader of a rival faction, felt that he had a stronger claim to the title of clan chieftain, and immediately rose in rebellion.[1] After the suppression of the Kunohe Rebellion, Sannohe castle was modernized with stone ramparts. However, after the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate, the clan seat was relocated south to Morioka Castle in 1634, and Sannohe Castle was allowed to fall into ruins.

In 1684, Morioka Domain established a daikansho, constructing a jin'ya on the site of the old castle.

After the Meiji restoration, one of the gates was donated to a local temple, and remaining structures were pulled down. The area later became the Shiroyama Prefectural Park (城山県立公園, Shiroyama Kenritsu Koen). In 1967, a faux-donjon was constructed to serve as a local history museum, even though there is no historical evidence to indicate that such a structure existed at any point in the castle’s history. In 1989 one of the gates of the castle was also re-constructed.

Description

Sannohe Castle is located at a strategic junction of the Ōshū Kaidō with the Mabechi River and one of its tributaries, the Appigawa. The castle is situated on a long and narrow hilltop with dimensions of approximately 500 meters by 200 meters, with sheer 70 meter sides, extending northwest to southeast. This area was divided into 20 enclosures at various levels, each surrounded by earthen walls. The main bailey is the highest and largest enclosure, with dimensions of 100 by 200 meters. Lower enclosures held the residences of relatives and important retainers, the garrison, stables and several ponds. In the Edo period, the most important enclosures were rebuilt with stone walls, and gates.

gollark: <@!330678593904443393> While better-sqlite3 *can* let me do what your PHP framework does, prepared statements are apparently more efficient and this is neater.
gollark: This is rendered to HTML.
gollark: Oh, and look how I write HTML:```javascript return { view(vnode) { const inputHandler = e => { value = e.target.value } if (vnode.attrs.initialValue && value === undefined || value === null) { value = vnode.attrs.initialValue } return m(".editor", [ m(".toolbar", [ m("button", { onclick: () => vnode.attrs.onsave(value, true) }, "Done"), m("button", { onclick: () => vnode.attrs.onsave(value, false) }, "Save"), m("button", { onclick: () => { previewing = !previewing } }, previewing ? "Edit" : "Preview") ]), previewing ? m(".preview", renderAST(parse(value))) : m("textarea", { value, oninput: inputHandler, onchange: inputHandler }), ]) } }```
gollark: BEES ACTIVATING.
gollark: CHECKMATE, ATHEISTS!

References

  1. Turnbull, Stephen (2010). Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Osprey. p. 53. ISBN 9781846039607.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.