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*''Japanese:''松江城''(Matsue-jou)''
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[[Image:Matsue.jpg|right|thumb|500px|The main tower of Matsue castle.]]
*''Type:Flatland''
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*''Type: Hilltop (''[[rinkakushiki]]'')''
*''Founder:Horio Yoshiharu''
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*''Founder: [[Horio Yoshiharu]]''
*''Year:[[1607]]-[[1611]]''
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*''Year: [[1607]]-[[1611]]''
*''Reconstructed:1960-2001''(Gate,Yagura,bridge)
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*''Reconstructed: 1960-2001''(Gate,Yagura,bridge)
*''Location:[[Izumo province]]''
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*''Location: [[Izumo province]]''
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*''Japanese:'' 松江城 ''(Matsue-jou)''
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Matsue castle was the chief [[castle]] of [[Matsue han]], located in [[Izumo province]] ([[Shimane prefecture]]). It is one of the oldest surviving original [[Edo period]] castles in Japan, having been constructed in [[1607]]-[[1611]] and never fully destroyed & rebuilt.
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Constructed in the Edo period, after the fighting of the [[Sengoku period]] had ended, and being located in a relatively remote part of Japan that was not a target of bombing or shelling during World War II, the castle has never seen combat.
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Unlike many castles, which used plaster under the eaves of the roof and at the tops of the walls to protect against fire, Matsue went untreated in this way.
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The castle was originally constructed by [[Horio Yoshiharu]] in [[1611]]. The [[Kyogoku clan|Kyôgoku clan]] then replaced the [[Horio clan]], for a brief time in the 1630s. They were then replaced as lords of Matsue in [[1638]] by the [[Matsudaira clan (Echizen)|Matsudaira clan of Echizen]], who ruled through the end of the Edo period. All nine ''daimyô'' of Matsue are buried at a temple nearby, called Gesshô-ji.
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The castle was abandoned in [[1871]], along with many other castles, when the [[samurai]] class was abolished. All of the structures except the main tower (''tenshu-kaku'') were torn down in [[1875]]; the main tower was torn down in 1955. However, the main tower was then rebuilt using the original materials in 1960, followed by other structures on the grounds in 2001.
    
==Link==
 
==Link==
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==References==
 
==References==
*[[Nihon no Meijo]]
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*Inoue Munekazu. ''[[Nihon no Meijo]]'' 日本の名城. Yuzankaku Publishing, 1992.
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*O'Grady, Daniel. "[http://www.japanese-castle-explorer.com/castle_profile.html?name=Matsue Matsue Castle]." Japanese Castle Explorer.
    
[[Category:Castles]]
 
[[Category:Castles]]
 
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}
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[[Category:Edo Period]]
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