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Kikugawa fortification ruins
菊川城館遺跡群
Kakegawa, Shizuoka prefecture, Japan
Kikugawa fortification ruins is located in Shizuoka Prefecture<div style="position: absolute; top: Expression error: Missing operand for *.%; left: -7677.9%; height: 0; width: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;">
Red pog
Kikugawa fortification ruins
Coordinates 34°43′22″N 138°04′36″E / 34.72278°N 138.07667°E / 34.72278; 138.07667Coordinates: 34°43′22″N 138°04′36″E / 34.72278°N 138.07667°E / 34.72278; 138.07667
Type Hirayama-style Japanese castle
Site information
Open to
the public
no
Condition ruins
Site history
Built Sengoku period

Kikugawa Fortification ruins (菊川城館遺跡群 Kikugawa-jōkan iseki-gun?) are a number of early Sengoku period fortifications located in what is now part of the city of Kikugawa, Shizuoka, Japan. These sites were collectively designed a National Historic Site by the Japanese government in 2004.[1] The National Historic Site designation consists of the sites of the Takada Yashiki ruins (高田大屋敷遺跡) and Yokoji Fortified Residence ruins (横地氏城館跡).

Overview[]

The Takeda Yashiki ruins are located near the junction of Kikugawa and Kamikosu rivers, about 11 meters above sea level, and were a key point in controlling traffic from the ocean to Shinano Province. They were excavated in 1988 and found to measure approximately 70 meters from east to west and about 93 m north to south, and to consist of a fortified square residence building surrounded by moats and a dike as protection against floods.

The Yokoji fortified residence site is located about 3 kilometers east of the Takada Yashiki ruins at the southwest end of the Makihara plateau along the Kikugawa River. The site was excavated in 1987 and was found to contain the remains of a number of fortified residences, temples, a mountain castle and grave sites from the late 12th to 15th centuries, extending about 2 kilometers east to west and about 0.6 kilometers north to south. The Yokoji clan were once a leading samurai clan in this area of Tōtōmi Province, and are mentioned in Kamakura period Azuma Kagami as gokenin of the shogunate, but they were destroyed by the Imagawa clan, who invaded their territory in 1476.

Both sites are currently empty fields with an explanatory placard.

See also[]

  • List of Historic Sites of Japan (Shizuoka)

Notes[]

External links[]

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The original article can be found at Kikugawa fortification ruins and the edit history here.

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