Shakujii Castle

Coordinates: 35°44′14″N 139°35′48″E / 35.737282°N 139.596791°E / 35.737282; 139.596791

Shakujii Castle
石神井城
Shakujii Park, Nerima, Tokyo, Japan

The ruins of Shakujii Castle
Type Kamakura period Japanese castle
Site information
Controlled by Toshima clan
Condition Traces remain; location is within a public park
Site history
Built Kamakura period (1185-1333)
Materials Wood, earthworks
Demolished late 1470s
Battles/wars Kyōtoku Rebellion (1477)

Shakujii castle (石神井城, -jō) was a Japanese castle located along the Shakujii River, in what is now Shakujii Park, in Tokyo's Nerima. The history of the inheritance of the feudal territory associated with it is the most clearly known of all territories in what is today Tokyo.[1]

The castle was strategically placed along the Shakujii River, near Sanbō-tera Pond, to control and defend the river valley. Though there may have been another similar fortification erected nearby during the Heian period (794-1185), it is likely that the last incarnation of Shakujii castle was first built after the Kamakura period (1185-1333). A dam was built around the same time, a short distance from the castle, at a spot selected by a diviner, to block the waterway.

The castle lasted into the Muromachi period (1336-1467), and was controlled by the Toshima clan who, supported by Kanrei (Shogun's deputy) Ashikaga Mochiuji, were in their prime during the rebellion of Uesugi Zenshū, which lasted from 1415-1417. However, roughly forty years later, the Toshima took part in the 1477 Kyōtoku Rebellion, supporting the uprising of Nagao Kageharu. Toshima Yasutsune led the forces of Shakujii castle and nearby Nerima castle to reinforce his brother Toshima Yasuaki, who was attacked at Hiratsuka castle. They were defeated by the army of Ōta Dōkan, a vassal of the Uesugi clan, who put down the rebellion. The Toshima then fled to Kozukue Castle, but were defeated there as well, and Shakujii castle was destroyed a short time later.

Recently, attempts have been made to restore the castle. However, there is very little remaining above ground, and even based on what digging has revealed, it has been difficult to determine the exact location, size, and extent of the fortifications and the moat.

References

(Note: this article derives almost entirely from a translation of the article on the Japanese wikipedia.)

  1. Nerima Local History Research Society (練馬郷土史研究会). Nerima-ku no rekishi (練馬区の歴史, "History of Nerima Ward"). Tokyo: Meichō Publishing, 1977. p27.
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