Tsurumaru castle

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The former site of the main gates to Tsurumaru castle, with the Reimeikan visible in the background

Tsurumaru castle, also known as Kagoshima castle, was the chief castle of the Shimazu clan of Satsuma han. It sat up against Mt. Shiroyama, facing out towards the castle town, beyond which lay the sea.

The castle was distinctive for its lack of a tenshu or tower keep, and was constructed in a style known as yakata-zukuri, combining some of the defensive elements of a castle with the architectural layout of a residential mansion.[1]

The grounds were taken over by the Meiji government for official use in the Meiji period, and then from 1901 until 1950 was home to the 7th High School Zôshikan; the iron gates of the school remain the main gates to the grounds today. The Iso Palace at Sengan'en, previously a secondary or vacation palace, then became the chief residence of the Shimazu clan.[2]

Today, the Reimeikan Museum of History and Culture (est. 1983) occupies the former honmaru (central/main area) of the former castle grounds, while the Kagoshima Prefectural Library sits in the former ninomaru (second area). A number of historical remnants, and commemorative monuments also stand on the site. The stone Ôtebashi remains intact as the main bridge over the moat, while the Ôtemon tower gate (gorômon or o-yagura mon) to which it used to lead burned down in a fire in 1873; all that survives today of the latter is the masugata stone foundations, forming a right-angled entry into the castle grounds, for defensive purposes. Some remains of the corner tower (kado yagura) which burned down at that time also survive, along with a marker for the former location of the Kirin-no-ma of the honmaru palace,

A statue of Atsuhime, designed by Order of Culture winner Nakamura Shin'ya, was erected on the grounds in 2010. Another set of statues on the grounds depicts students from the 7th High School, and is accompanied by other monuments and markers related to the school. A stone dedicated to Lord Shimazu Shigehide, who founded the Zôshikan han school in 1773, was erected in 1942. Another stone marker associated with Shigehide commemorates the treasure house, known as the Shûchinhôko, which he maintained at the Shimazu clan's Edo mansion at Takanawa. There, he kept rare plants and animals, local products from various places across Japan and overseas, and conducted efforts in classification and research. This stone was moved to Kagoshima in 2000 from the former site of the Edo mansion, in Yukigaya, Ôta-ku, Tokyo. Another stone, erected in 1912, commemorates the visit of the Meiji Emperor to Kagoshima on imperial tour in 1872.

Finally, one of the ponds of the castle's gardens, in the southeast corner of the grounds, has been recreated.

Links

References

  1. Gallery labels, permanent exhibition, Reimeikan Museum, Kagoshima, Sept 2014.
  2. Gallery labels, permanent exhibits, Shôkoshûseikan, Kagoshima, Sept 2014.