Chihaya Castle
{{Short description|Japanese Kamakura-period castle}}
{{Infobox military installation
| name = Chihaya Castle
| nativename-a={{lang|ja|千早城}}
| partof =
| location = Chihayaakasaka, Osaka-fu, Japan
| image = Scale model of Chihaya castle.jpg
| image_size =
| caption =Scale model of Chihaya Castle
| type = Yamajiro-style Japanese castle
| map_type = Japan Osaka Prefecture#Japan
| map_alt = Location in Japan
| map_relief = 1
| map_caption = Chihaya Castle
|coordinates = {{Coord|34|25|2.01|N|135|39|4.31|E|region:JP-27|display=it}}
| height =
| ownership =
| controlledby =
| condition = Ruins
| built = 1331
| builder = Kusunoki Masashige
| used =1331-1372
| materials =Wood, stone
| demolished =
| battles =
| past_commanders =
| garrison =
| occupants =
| events =
|footnotes = {{box|background=white|align=center|wide=yes|border size=3px|border color=brown|text align=center|National Historic Site of Japan}}
{{maplink2|type=point|frame=yes|plain=yes|zoom=14|frame-align=center|frame-width=200|coord={{coord|34|25|2.01|N|135|39|4.31|E}}}}}}
{{nihongo|Chihaya Castle|千早城|Chihaya-jō}} is a late Kamakura period Japanese castle located in the village of Chihayaakasaka, Osaka Prefecture, Japan. Its ruins have been protected as a National Historic Site since 1934.{{cite web|url=https://bunka.nii.ac.jp/heritages/detail/161678|title=千早城跡 |work=Cultural Heritage Online|publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs|language=Japanese|accessdate=15 September 2021}}
History
Chihaya Castle is located at a ridge extending from Mount Kongō on the border of Kawachi Province with the Yoshino region of Yamato Province. It overlooks a narrow valley and is approximately five kilometers upstream from Akasaka Castle, which was the main base of the Kusunoki clan. In 1331, when Emperor Go-Daigo attempted to overthrow the Kamakura shogunate in the Genkō War, he relied on Prince Moriyoshi and a local lord from the Chihaya-Akasaka area, Kusunoki Masashige to raise an army. However, this first attempt failed, and Emperor Go-Daigo was captured and exiled to the Oki Islands. Kusunoki Masashige faked his death at the Siege of Akasaka and escaped into the deep mountains of his own territory where he constructed Kami-Akasaka Castle and Chihaya Castle.{{cite book |last1=Isomura |first1=Yukio |last2=Sakai |first2=Hideya |title=(国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia |date=2012 |publisher=学生社 |isbn=978-4311750403}}{{in lang|ja}}
The place selected for Chihaya Castle was very defensible: a narrow ridge with an elevation of 150 meters with steep cliffs, protected on both sides by rivers. The only access was by a climb of 500 steep and narrow stairs and the surrounding topography was not conductive to siege operations. Moveable bridges were among the fortress' chief defensive measures, alongside its wooden walls, earthwork defenses, and strategic location on Mt. Kongō. The fortress was surrounded with felled trees and boulders, which could be rolled down the mountain on an approaching army, and screens of brush were used to help protect from arrows. The castle itself consisted of five enclosures spread 200 meters along the ridge, protected by dry moats. The main enclosure measured around 100 by 20 meters and may have had a yagura tower in one corner. Although the castle was small, it could house several hundred men.
In 1333, Kusunoki Masashige emerged from hiding, attacking shogunate positions in Kii province, Osaka and then the Rokuhara tandai offices in Kyoto, The Kamakura shogunate sent a large army against him, which took Kami-Akasaka Castle after a siege of two weeks and then attacked Chihaya Castle. Per the medieval chronicle Taiheiki, the greatly outnumbered defenders put up a strong defense, forcing the attackers to abandon direct assault and to resort to a siege. However, the castle had a well, and could also receive supplies carried by yamabushi supporting Prince Moriyoshi, who was on the other side of Mount Kongō, shogunal forces were unable to cut the castle's supply lines. Moreover, Kusunoki Masashige used guerrilla warfare tactics, making continual raids and surprise attacks, or using straw dummies to trick the shogunal army. As the siege continued, the shogunal army, trapped in the narrow valley, began to experience supply problems, along with a considerable loss in prestige in being unable to defeat their numerically much smaller enemy.
While this battle was occurring, Emperor Go-Daigo managed to escape from Oki and raised a new army. The Kamakura shogunate dispatched another large army under the command of Ashikaga Takauji; however, Takauji defected to the imperial side and soon afterwards, at the Battle of Kamakura, the shogunate was overthrown. After the Kenmu restoration, Chihaya Castle became the residence of Kusunoki Masashige, and his sons Kusunoki Masatsura, Kusunoki Masanori and Kusunoki Masatoki. However, in 1392, the castle was attacked by Hatakeyama Motokuni of the Northern Court, who defeated Kusunoki Masanori's son, Kusunoki Masakatsu, and the castle was abandoned.
During the Meiji period, a Shinto shrine to Kusunoki Masashige was erected on the site of the Ni-no-maru in castle ruins, with the shrine offices in the San-no-maru.
Chihaya Castle was listed as one of Japan's Top 100 Castles by the Japan Castle Foundation in 2006.[https://web.archive.org/web/20141117152607/http://www1a.biglobe.ne.jp/nihonjokaku/ Japan Castle Foundation]
Chihaya Castle11.jpg|site of the Yagura
Chihaya Castle12.jpg|Honmaru
Chihaya-jinja haiden.jpg|Ni-no Maru (Chihaya Jinja)
Chihaya-jinja1.jpg|San-no-maru
Chihaya Castle1.jpg|Yon-no-Maru
Chihaya Castle15.jpg|Old map of the castle
Chihaya Castle07.jpg|Dry moats facing San-no-maru
Chihaya Castle05.jpg|Dry moats facing Yon-no-Maru
View from Chihaya Castle.jpg|View from Yon-no-Maru
Chihaya Castle01.jpg|Entrance to Mount Kongō
Chihaya Castle nawabari.jpg|Layout map of Chihaya Castle
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |title=An Encyclopedia of Japanese Castles | last=De Lange |first=William |year=2021 |pages=600 pages|publisher=Toyo Press |location=Groningen |isbn=978-9492722300}}
- Frederic, Louis (2002). "Chihaya-jō." Japan Encyclopedia. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
- Sansom, George (1961). "A History of Japan: 1334-1615." Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. pp123–4
- Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.
- {{cite book | title=Japanese Castles| last=Motoo| first=Hinago| date=1986| pages= 200 pages| publisher=Kodansha| location=Tokyo| isbn=0-87011-766-1}}
External links
- {{commonscatinline|Chihaya Castle}}
{{100 Fine Castles of Japan}}
{{Kongō-Ikoma-Kisen Quasi-National Park}}
Category:Buildings and structures completed in 1332
Category:1330s establishments in Japan
Category:Castles in Osaka Prefecture
Category:Historic Sites of Japan