Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Geography of Himeji Castle

 its build on Himeyama hill
Himeji Castle (姫路城 Himeji-jō?) is a hilltop Japanese castle complex located in Himeji, in Hyōgo PrefectureJapan


Akamatsu Norimura- was a Japanese samurai of the Akamatsu clanNorimura constructed a fort on a                                         hill which later became the site for Himeji Castle
 Kuroda Yoshitakahe was a chief strategist and an adviser to Toyotomi Hideyoshi.Shigetaka served                                     as a senior retainer of Kodera Masamoto, the lord of Himeji
 Toyotomi Hideyoshiwas a preeminent daimyo, warrior, general and politician of the 
                                     Sengoku             period[1] who is regarded as Japan's second "great unifier.
 Tokugawa Ieyasu was the founder and first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, which                                          ruled from the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 until the Meiji Restoration in 1868.
 Ikeda Terumasa was a Japanese daimyo of the early Edo period.Terumasa was also known by the                                    nickname saigoku no shogun, or, ‘The Shogun of Western Japan’
 Honda Tadakatsuwas a Japanese daimyo of the early Edo period, who ruled the 
                                 Kuwana                  Domain and then the Himeji Domain. He was the son                                              of Honda Tadakatsu.
Princess Sen- was the eldest daughter of the shogun Tokugawa Hidetada and his wife Oeyo. She was                                  born during the Warring-States period of Japanese history















Culture of Himeji Castle

Cultural impact[edit]

Himeji Castle is frequently known as Hakuro-jō ("White Egret Castle") or Shirasagi-jō ("White Heron Castle") because of its brilliant white exterior and supposed resemblance to a bird taking flight.[7][9] The castle has been featured extensively in foreign and Japanese films, including the James Bond movie "You Only Live Twice" (1967), and Akira Kurosawa's Kagemusha (1980) and Ran (1985).[12] In the television miniseries Shōgun (1980) it served as a stand-in for feudal-era Osaka castle,[14] which has lost the surrounding fortifications.

Lore and legend

The legend of the "Old Widow's Stone" (姥が石 Ubagaishi?) is another folklore story associated with the castle.[6] According to the legend, Toyotomi Hideyoshi ran out of stones when building the original three-story castle keep, and an old woman heard about his trouble.[6] She gave him her hand millstone even though she needed it for her trade.[6] It was said that people who heard the story were inspired and also offered stones to Hideyoshi, speeding up construction of the castle.[6] To this day, the supposed stone can be seen covered with a wire net in the middle of one of the stone walls in the castle complex.[6]Himeji Castle is associated with a number of local lore.[6] The well-known kaidan (or Japanese ghost story) of Banchō Sarayashiki (番町皿屋敷 "The Dish Mansion at Banchō"?) is set in Edo (Tokyo), but a variant called Banshū Sarayashiki (播州皿屋敷 "The Dish mansion in Harima Province"?) is set in Himeji Castle. There is a disputed claim that the castle is the bona fide location of the entire legend, and the alleged Okiku's Well remains in the castle to this day.[5]According to the legend, Okiku was falsely accused of losing dishes that were valuable family treasures, and then killed and thrown into the well.[6] Her ghost remained to haunt the well at night, counting dishes in a despondent tone.[6]
A folklore story is also associated with Genbei Sakurai, who was Ikeda Terumasa's master carpenter in the construction of the castle keep.[6] According to the legend, Sakurai was dissatisfied with his construction, feeling that the keep leaned a little to the southeast.[6] Eventually, he became distraught and climbed to the top of the keep, where he jumped to his death with a chisel in his mouth.[6]

History of Himeji Castle

Himeji Castle's construction dates to 1333, when a fort was constructed on Himeyama hill by Akamatsu Norimura, the ruler of the ancient Harima Province.[4] In 1346, his son Sadonori demolished this fort and built Himeyama Castle in its place.[4] In 1545, the Kuroda clan was stationed here by order of the Kodera clan, and feudal ruler Kuroda Shigetaka remodeled the castle into Himeji Castle, completing the work in 1561.[4][13] In 1580, Kuroda Yoshitaka presented the castle to Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and in 1581 Hideyoshi significantly remodeled the castle, building a three-story castle keep with an area of about 55 m2 (592 ft2).[6][13]
Following the battle of Sekigahara in 1600, Tokugawa Ieyasu granted Himeji Castle to his son-in-law, Ikeda Terumasa, as a reward for his help in battle.[4] Ikeda demolished the three-story keep that had been created by Hideyoshi, and completely rebuilt and expanded the castle from 1601 to 1609, adding three moats and transforming it into the castle complex that is seen today.[4][6] The expenditure of labor involved in this expansion is believed to have totaled 25 million man-days.[4] Ikeda died in 1613, passing the castle to his son, who also died three years later.[5] In 1617, Honda Tadamasa and his family inherited the castle, and Honda added several buildings to the castle complex, including a special tower for his daughter-in-law, Princess Sen (千姫 Senhime?).[5]
In the Meiji Period (1868 to 1912), many Japanese castles were destroyed.[3] Himeji Castle was abandoned in 1871 and some of the castle corridors and gates were destroyed to make room for Japanese army barracks.[6][13] The entirety of the castle complex was slated to be demolished by government policy, but it was spared by the efforts of Nakamura Shigeto, an Army colonel.[6] A stone monument honoring Nakamura was placed in the castle complex within the first gate, the Diamond Gate (菱門 Hishimon?).[6] Although Himeji Castle was spared, Japanese castles had become obsolete and their preservation was costly.[6]When the han feudal system was abolished in 1871, Himeji Castle was put up for auction.[6] The castle was purchased by a Himeji resident for 23Japanese yen (about 200,000 yen or US$2,258 today).[6] The buyer wanted to demolish the castle complex and develop the land, but the cost of destroying the castle was estimated to be too great, and it was again spared.[6]
Himeji was heavily bombed in 1945, at the end of World War II, and although most of the surrounding area was burned to the ground, the castle survived intact.[8] One firebomb was dropped on the top floor of the castle but fortunately failed to explode.[14] In order to preserve the castle complex, substantial repair work was undertaken starting in 1956, with a labor expenditure of 250,000 man-days and a cost of 550 million yen.[6][13] In January 1995, the city of Himeji was substantially damaged by the Great Hanshin earthquake, but Himeji Castle again survived virtually undamaged, demonstrating remarkable earthquake resistance.[10] Even the bottle of sake placed on the altar at the top floor of the keep remained in place.[10]