Kan'onsaka Castle (Hanishina)

From Jcastle.info
Revision as of 19:18, 9 July 2022 by ART (talk | contribs)

MurakamiKanonsakajou (4).JPG

History

Kan'onsakajō was the residence of Murakami Kunikiyo, the son of Murakami Yoshikiyo; it is thought to have measured about 100m². The residence was built in 1583 after Murakami Kunikiyo was dismissed from his post at Kaiźujō (Matsushiro Castle). The site, which used the Maezawa River to the north as a moat, was abandoned after 1600.


Visit Notes

Kan'onsakajō is a small castle remnant in Sakaki Town. The site today is fields and, to the south, housing. The remnants of the castle are centred around a shrine to Inari. Here there is an embankment which was used by the castle as fortified terrain. If one ascends the steps to the shrine up the embankment one can find a lonesome segment of dorui (an earthen rampart), actually part of the inari shrine as it has a hokora (mini shrine) atop. Other segments of dorui probably remain adjacent but these mounds were thickly coated in old vines and so I couldn't ascertain their status as ruins. Probably, being next to the confirmed dorui, they are old earthen walls, but with the amount of ropey old plants covering them they could've just've easily been old tractors! Well, I'm sure they were ruins...




Gallery
  • Dorui


Castle Profile
English Name Murakami Kan'onsaka Castle
Japanese Name 村上観音坂城
Founder Murakami Kunikiyo
Year Founded 1583
Castle Type Fortified Manor
Castle Condition Ruins only
Historical Period Pre Edo Period
Artifacts Dorui
Features
Visitor Information
Access Tekuno-Sakaki Station on the Shinano Railway; 10 minute walk
Visitor Information 24/7 free; fields
Time Required 20 minutes
Location Sakaki, Nagano Prefecture
Coordinates 36° 26' 36.56" N, 138° 11' 29.00" E
Loading map...
Admin
Added to Jcastle 2022
Contributor ART
Admin Year Visited Viewer Contributed
Friends of JCastle
Ranmaru
Yogo


2.00
(one vote)
Add your comment
Jcastle.info welcomes all comments. If you do not want to be anonymous, register or log in. It is free.