Difference between revisions of "Fukazawa Castle"

From Jcastle.info
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{{Castle
 
{{Castle
|English Name=
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|English Name=Fukazawa Castle
 
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|Japanese Name=深沢城
 
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|Romaji Name=Fukazawa-jo
 
+
|Founder=Imagawa Ujichika
 
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|Year Founded=16th C.
Fukazawa Castle
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|Castle Type=Flatland
|Japanese Name=
+
|Castle Condition=Ruins only
深沢城
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|Designations=Prefectural Historic Site
|Romaji Name=
+
|Historical Period=Pre Edo Period
Fukazawa-jo
+
|Features=trenches
|Alternate Names=
+
|Access=Gotenba Sta. or Ashigara Station (Gotenba Line), 50 min walk
 
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|Visitor Information=Private property, be respectful. Open anytime.
|Founder=
+
|Time Required=25mins
Imagawa Ujichika
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|Website=http://www.sengoku-shizuoka.com/castle/3108005/
|Year Founded=
+
|City=Gotenba
16th C.
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|Prefecture=Shizuoka Prefecture
|Castle Type=
+
|Notes=The ruins are on a mix of private property. The guy form the house by the road was following me at a distance the whole time and watching me suspiciously making it very uncomfortable. Even if it's private it's still open and that was a bit rude.<p>
Flatland
 
|Castle Condition=
 
Ruins only
 
|Designations=
 
Prefectural Historic Site
 
|Historical Period=
 
Pre Edo Period
 
|Main Keep Structure=
 
 
 
|Year Reconstructed=
 
 
 
|Artifacts=
 
 
 
 
 
 
|Features=
 
 
 
|Access=
 
 
 
 
 
Gotenba Sta. or Ashigara Station (Gotenba Line), 50 min walk
 
 
 
 
 
|Visitor Information=
 
 
 
Private property, be respectful. Open anytime.  
 
 
 
|Time Required=
 
25mins
 
|City=
 
Gotenba, Shizuoka Pref.
 
|Prefecture=
 
Shizuoka Prefecture
 
|Notes=
 
 
 
 
 
The ruins are on a mix of private property. The guy form the house by the road was following me at a distance the whole time and watching me suspiciously making it very uncomfortable. Even if it's private it's still open and that was a bit rude.<p>
 
 
  Daiunin, a nearby temple, has the original Otemon and is only about a 15 min walk away.</p>
 
  Daiunin, a nearby temple, has the original Otemon and is only about a 15 min walk away.</p>
 
  <p>There is also an occasional bus from Gotenba Sta. that goes near the castle, but I bicycled from Gotenba.</p>
 
  <p>There is also an occasional bus from Gotenba Sta. that goes near the castle, but I bicycled from Gotenba.</p>
 
+
|History=This castle started as the palace of the Fukazawa. It was fortified into a castle in the 16th C. by Imagawa Ujichika to watch over the Ashigara and Koshu Highways and the confluence of the Mabuse and Nuke Rivers. In 1568 it became the site of a pitched battle between the Hojo and Takeda Shingen. The Hojo prevented Takeda from moving into the Suruga Province but he came back the following year and succeeded in conquering the castle in 1570. The Hojo quickly fought back and retook the castle, but a few months later Takeda himself went back to lay siege to the castle. Hojo Ujinari gave up and surrendered the castle. The castle was commanded by Komai Masanao for the Takeda until 1582 when he set fire to the castle and abandoned it. When the area came under the control of Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1584, Ieyasu rebuilt the castle for his perimeter defenses. After the fall of the Hojo in 1590 the castle was no longer necessary and was abandoned.
 
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|Year Visited=2014
|History=
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|AddedJcastle=2014
 
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|Japanese Notes=城跡は私有地にあるためマナーを守りましょう。でもいくら私有地と言っても道路沿いの家の人が遠くから私を追って観察していたのは失礼でしょう。
 
 
This castle started as the palace of the Fukazawa. It was fortified into a castle in the 16th C. by Imagawa Ujichika to watch over the Ashigara and Koshu Highways and the confluence of the Mabuse and Nuke Rivers. In 1568 it became the site of a pitched battle between the Hojo and Takeda Shingen. The Hojo prevented Takeda from moving into the Suruga Province but he came back the following year and succeeded in conquering the castle in 1570. The Hojo quickly fought back and retook the castle, but a few months later Takeda himself went back to lay siege to the castle. Hojo Ujinari gave up and surrendered the castle. The castle was commanded by Komai Masanao for the Takeda until 1582 when he set fire to the castle and abandoned it. When the area came under the control of Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1584, Ieyasu rebuilt the castle for his perimeter defenses. After the fall of the Hojo in 1590 the castle was no longer necessary and was abandoned.
 
 
 
 
 
|Visits=
 
April 13, 2014
 
|Japanese Notes=
 
 
 
 
 
城跡は私有地にあるためマナーを守りましょう。でもいくら私有地と言っても道路沿いの家の人が遠くから私を追って観察していたのは失礼でしょう。
 
 
  <p>
 
  <p>
 
  大手門は近くの大雲院に移築現存しています。</p>
 
  大手門は近くの大雲院に移築現存しています。</p>
 
+
|Visits=April 13, 2014
 
+
|GPSLocation=35.32499, 138.95666
|Year Visited=
+
|rating_average=1.0
2014
+
|castleElev=417
|Website=
+
|ekiLatLng=35.332067,138.981753
 
+
|ekiElev=335
http://www.sengoku-shizuoka.com/castle/3108005/
+
|elevChange=82
 
+
|kamon=imagawa.jpg
|rating_average=
+
|kamonFam=Imagawa
1.0
+
|adminRating=1
|castleElev=
+
|oldID=391
417
 
|ekiLatLng=
 
35.332067,138.981753
 
|ekiElev=
 
335
 
|elevChange=
 
82
 
|kamon=
 
imagawa.jpg
 
|kamonFam=
 
Imagawa
 
|adminRating=
 
1
 
|oldID=
 
391
 
|GPSLocation=
 
35.324988,138.956665
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 12:40, 1 October 2017

Fukazawa3.jpg

History

This castle started as the palace of the Fukazawa. It was fortified into a castle in the 16th C. by Imagawa Ujichika to watch over the Ashigara and Koshu Highways and the confluence of the Mabuse and Nuke Rivers. In 1568 it became the site of a pitched battle between the Hojo and Takeda Shingen. The Hojo prevented Takeda from moving into the Suruga Province but he came back the following year and succeeded in conquering the castle in 1570. The Hojo quickly fought back and retook the castle, but a few months later Takeda himself went back to lay siege to the castle. Hojo Ujinari gave up and surrendered the castle. The castle was commanded by Komai Masanao for the Takeda until 1582 when he set fire to the castle and abandoned it. When the area came under the control of Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1584, Ieyasu rebuilt the castle for his perimeter defenses. After the fall of the Hojo in 1590 the castle was no longer necessary and was abandoned.


Visit Notes
The ruins are on a mix of private property. The guy form the house by the road was following me at a distance the whole time and watching me suspiciously making it very uncomfortable. Even if it's private it's still open and that was a bit rude.

Daiunin, a nearby temple, has the original Otemon and is only about a 15 min walk away.

There is also an occasional bus from Gotenba Sta. that goes near the castle, but I bicycled from Gotenba.


城跡は私有地にあるためマナーを守りましょう。でもいくら私有地と言っても道路沿いの家の人が遠くから私を追って観察していたのは失礼でしょう。

大手門は近くの大雲院に移築現存しています。


Loading map...


Gallery
  • Stone signpost
  • crescent shaped moat
  • Sannomaru Umadashi
  • umadashi between the Ninomaru and Sannomaru
  • Ninomaru Bailey
  • remains of a warehouse
  • Honmaru umadashi
  • Honmaru Bailey
  • Honmaru Bailey
  • Ninomaru Bailey
  • dry moat
  • Otemon Gate from Daiunin
  • The Otemon Gate at Daiunin
  • Map


Castle Profile
English Name Fukazawa Castle
Japanese Name 深沢城
Founder Imagawa Ujichika
Year Founded 16th C.
Castle Type Flatland
Castle Condition Ruins only
Designations Prefectural Historic Site
Historical Period Pre Edo Period
Features trenches
Visitor Information
Access Gotenba Sta. or Ashigara Station (Gotenba Line), 50 min walk
Visitor Information Private property, be respectful. Open anytime.
Time Required 25mins
Website http://www.sengoku-shizuoka.com/castle/3108005/
Location Gotenba, Shizuoka Prefecture
Coordinates 35° 19' 29.96" N, 138° 57' 23.98" E
Loading map...
Admin
Added to Jcastle 2014
Admin Year Visited 2014
Admin Visits April 13, 2014


1.50
(2 votes)
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ARTShogun

9 months ago
Score 0++

Fukazawajō is a medieval earthworks fortification site with substantial ruins. Most of the baileys, which are now farmland, are divided by deep karabori (dry moats). The site is farmed and many of the karabori are too overgrown to properly explore. I did have a little peak in one which was a little more clear. It's always fun to wander around a karabori! The site is quite extensive and has many baileys; it starts at the road where there is a monument to the historic site and an information board, and continues on behind a cluster of homes to the fields.

I had to contend with a farmer, to whom I nodded politely, slowly moving down the narrow lanes between baileys on his tractor, but he did not tell me to go away or anything. In the furthermost bailey (main bailey?) there was a group of agri' workers taking lunch. In the karabori were many large spiders I was forced to fight. It's quite a busy site, part of people's lives, of which the fort's history must surely be of little consideration day-to-day.

Fukazawajō had at least one satellite fort, Daiun'in-doi, which now has a temple gate which is said to be the relocated ôtemon (main gate) from Fukazawajō itself.