Matsumoto  Castle is located in Matsumoto City in Nagano  Prefecture on the  country's main island of Honshu. It is easily reached  from Tokyo   in about three hours by train. The castle has many unusual elements   surrounding it, the most obvious is the location—a swampy area in the   plains rather than high upon a hill or set between fast-moving rivers   like most of Japan's historic castles. Matsumoto Castle was originally   named Fukashi Castle. It was greatly reinforced within because of its   vulnerable location. The structure itself is one of the most carefully   built and fortified so inhabitants were well protected. There is a   ternary moat encircling the castle and high-reaching stone walls.
The  castle's fortification is threefold, balanced with the concentric  moat  surrounding it. The outermost wall spans two miles, built to  reduce  the affects of cannon fire. The inner stone ring was occupied by   samurai who kept their residences there, as close as possible to the   castle. The third and last wall is that of the original castle walls.   The entire castle was built in 1504 in a city then called Nagano, north   of Nagoya. The castle in Nagano is considered one of the top three Japanese castles along with Himeji Castle (an easy half-day excursion from Kyoto) and Kumamoto Castle, east of Nagasaki.
Visiting the medieval castles of Japan is one of the top things to do during vacations, along with tours   of the country's most exceptional shrines and temples. Though the   wooden castle reinforcements were almost completely ravaged in a fire in   the late nineteenth century, the castle has since undergone a lengthy   renovation that began in 1969. By 2007, the extensive renovation was   completed, just in time for the castle's 400th anniversary celebration.
Matsumoto  castle tours are extremely popular and include an in depth  history of  the castle's existence. The Matsumoto Castle in Nagano was  built by the  Ogasawara clan on the original site. It was a time of  excessive battle  in Japan, referred to as the Warring States or Sengoku.  Mastumoto  Castle was seized by the Takeda clan in the mid-sixteenth  century and  subsequently by Tokugawa Ieyasu, who founded the Tokugawa  bakufu, a  feudal reign once ruled by the shoguns of the clan family.
After  Japan was reunified in the seventeenth century, the Fukashi  castle in  Nagano was awarded to Ishikawa clan, after the transfer of  Tokugawa  Ieyasu by his leader. The Ishiwara family proceeded  construction on the  present castle in 1580. The towers and central  building, called the  main donjon,  were constructed in 1593 and 1594 by  the second daimyo  Ishikawa Yasunaga, a feudal lord of the time. From the  early  seventeenth century through to the later nineteenth century,  numerous  daimyo dominated the Matsumoto Castle.
Matsumoto  Castle tours can be arranged in Nagano. Since the castle  was declared a  national treasure in the early 1950s, tourism has grown  significantly.  There are both group and private tours available, both  for reasonable  rates. An interesting fact about the castle explained  during tours is  it was utilized as an aircraft factory during WWII by  the Mitsubishi  Corporation, amazingly escaping Allied bombs. The roof  details are  another strikingly distinct design featured in Matsumoto  castle tours.  Visitors can explore the five stories inside and see the  dramatic  contrast of black laquer lining white plaster on the exterior.  Nearby  attractions include the oldest elementary school in Japan called  Kaichi  School.
Label:
Historical Place,
Island,
Japan

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