- Hiroshima Castle
Infobox Military Structure
name=Hiroshima Castle
広島城
partof=
location=Hiroshima,Japan
caption=Reconstructed main keep.
type=Azuchi-Momoyama castle
built=1592-1599, rebuilt 1958
builder=Mōri Terumoto
materials=stone, wood, plaster walls (original); concrete, steel, wood, stone, plaster (reconstruction)
height=12.4 meters (stone base), 26.6 meters (reconstructedkeep , five stories)
used=1592-1945
demolished=6 August ,1945 as a result of theatomic bombing of Hiroshima .
condition=Reconstructed, serves as history museum
controlledby=Mōri clan (1592-1600),Fukushima Masanori (1600-1619),Asano clan (1619-1869),Japan (1869-present)
garrison=
commanders=
battles=nihongo|Hiroshima Castle|広島城|Hiroshima-jō, sometimes called nihongo|Carp Castle|鯉城|Rijō (coordinates coord|34|24|10|N|132|27|33|E|display=inline,title|type:city_region:JP) is a castle in Hiroshima,
Japan which was the home of the "daimyō" (feudal lord) of the Hiroshima han (fief). Originally constructed in the 1590s, the castle was destroyed in the atomic bombing in1945 . It was rebuilt in1958 , a replica of the original which now serves as a museum of Hiroshima's history prior toWorld War II .History
Mōri Terumoto , one ofToyotomi Hideyoshi 'scouncil of Five Elders , established Hiroshima castle in1589 at the delta of the Otagawa river. There was no Hiroshima city or town at the time, and the area was called Gokamura, meaning 'five villages.' Beginning in1591 , Mōri governed nine provinces from this castle, including much of what is now Shimane, Yamaguchi, Tottori, Okayama andHiroshima Prefecture s.When construction on the castle began, Gokamura was renamed Hiroshima, as a more impressive name was called for. "Hiro" was taken from
Ōe no Hiromoto , an ancestor of the Mōri family, and "Shima" was taken fromFukushima Motonaga who helped Mōri Terumoto choose the castle site. Some accounts state that the name 'Hiroshima', meaning literally 'wide island', comes from the existence of several large islands in the delta of the Otagawa, near the castle's site.Following the
battle of Sekigahara in1600 , Mōri was forced out of the castle, retreating to Hagi in today'sYamaguchi prefecture .Fukushima Masanori became the lord of Aki andBingo province s (which today compriseHiroshima prefecture , and of Hiroshima castle). However, the newTokugawa shogunate forbade any castle construction without permission fromEdo ; this was part of how the shogunate kept the "daimyō" from gaining power and overthrowing the shogunate. When Fukushima repaired the castle following a flood in1619 , he was dispatched to Kawanakajima in today'sNagano prefecture .Asano Nagaakira became lord of the castle.From 1619 until the abolition of the feudal system during the
Meiji Restoration (1869 ), theAsano family were lords of Aki andBingo province s.After the Meiji Restoration, the castle came to serve as a military facility, and the Imperial GHQ was based there during the
First Sino-Japanese War in1894 -1895 . The foundations of several of the GHQ outbuildings, just a few hundred paces from the castle's main tower, remain today.The castle was destroyed in the atomic bomb blast of
August 6 ,1945 . The present tower, constructed largely of concrete, was completed in1958 ."Daimyō" of Hiroshima
#
Mōri Terumoto (1591 -1600 )* ; 1,120,000 "koku "
#Fukushima Masanori (1600 -1619 ); 498,223 "koku"
#Asano Nagaakira (1619 -1632 ); 426,500 "koku"**
#Asano Mitsuakira (1632 -1672 )
#Asano Tsunaakira (1672 -1673 )
#Asano Tsunanaga (1673 -1708 )
#Asano Yoshinaga (1708 -1752 )
#Asano Munetsune (1752 -1763 )
#Asano Shigeakira (1763 -1799 )
#Asano Narikata (1799 -1830 )
#Asano Naritaka (1831 -1858 )
#Asano Yoshiteru (1858 -1858 )
#Asano Nagamichi (1858 -1869 )
#Asano Nagakoto (1869 -1869 )* "The years listed are those in which the lord occupied Hiroshima castle, not the years of his life."** "All of the lords after Asano Nagaakira enjoyed the same 426,500 "koku".tructure
The castle was originally constructed in wood, pine primarily, and had attached wings to the east and to the south. It was completed sometime between
1592 and1599 , and was designated a National Treasure in1931 . The reconstructed castle features the main tower ("tenshu") only, which is made primarily of reinforced concrete. Its five floors stand 26.6 meters above the stone foundation which, in turn, is 12.4 meters high off the ground. However, in recent years, a gate and a "yagura" in the "ninomaru" have been re-constructed out of wood using the original methods.An excellent example of a "hirajiro" or flatlands (plains) castle, Hiroshima castle once had three concentric moats in addition to the Otagawa river to the west (now called the Hongawa), which provided an additional natural barrier. The two outer moats were filled in during the late 19th & early 20th centuries, and much of what was once within the castle grounds is now modern urban areas, including homes, schools, offices and shops. A number of secondary castle buildings, towers and turrets once stood, and a
Shinto shrine called Hiroshima Gokoku Jinja is located within the innermost moat, having been moved there after 1945.Also located inside the "honmaru" is the concrete bunker from which the first radio broadcast out of Hiroshima following the atomic bombing was made.
ee also
*
Japanese castle References
*Hiroshima Castle tourist brochure obtained at the castle.
Literature
*cite book | title=Castles in Japan| last=Schmorleitz| first=Morton S.| date=1974| pages= pg. 145| publisher=Charles E. Tuttle Co.| location=Tokyo| id=ISBN 0-8084-1102-4
*cite book | title=Japanese Castles| last=Motoo| first=Hinago| date=1986| pages= 200 pages| publisher=Kodansha| location=Tokyo| id=ISBN 0-87011-766-1External links
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