大垣城
Ogaki Castle
概要
Ogaki Castle, built around 1535 in Mino Province (modern Gifu Prefecture), earned its place in history as the main stronghold of Ishida Mitsunari and the Western Army on the eve of the epochal Battle of Sekigahara (1600). The battle — fought just 12 kilometers to the west — in a single half-day determined the course of Japanese history for the next 250 years, establishing Tokugawa supremacy. Sekigahara was the last great battle in which Japan's finest Sengoku-era swords were used in mass combat, making Ogaki Castle a powerful symbol of the end of the age of the sword as a battlefield weapon. The castle also has connections to the haiku poet Matsuo Bashō, who concluded his famous Oku no Hosomichi journey here.
與刀劍的關聯
Ogaki Castle's sword significance lies in its role as the last great stage for Japanese swords as battlefield weapons. The Battle of Sekigahara (1600) — in which Ogaki served as the Western Army's base — was one of the final mass engagements in which Sengoku-era combat swords were deployed at scale. Mino Province (modern Gifu), where Ogaki stands, was one of Japan's great sword-producing regions — home to the famous smith Magoroku Kanemoto, whose blades bore the distinctive 'three-cedar-tree' hamon and were prized by warlords for their cutting power. After Sekigahara, the nature of the Japanese sword changed profoundly — from battlefield weapon to spiritual symbol and art object — making Ogaki a poignant threshold in sword history.
看點
- Ogaki Castle tower (reconstruction) — exhibits on Sekigahara and Toda family swords and armor
- Sekigahara Battlefield — 20 min by car; the pivotal 1600 battle site with a new dedicated museum
- Ishida Mitsunari's battlefield camp (Sasaoyama hill) — views over the entire Sekigahara basin
- Oku no Hosomichi Musubi no Chi Memorial Hall — commemorating Bashō's famous journey's end
- Suimon-gawa promenade — historic waterway linking castle to the city's water culture
※開放時間和門票價格可能會有變動,請在造訪前確認官方網站。
鄰近城堡
松本城
National TreasureMatsumoto Castle
城主: Ishikawa Kazumasa / Matsudaira clan
犬山城
National TreasureInuyama Castle
城主: Naruse Masanari / Naruse clan
名古屋城
Special Historic SiteNagoya Castle
城主: Tokugawa Yoshinao (first lord of Owari Tokugawa)
金沢城
National Historic SiteKanazawa Castle
城主: Maeda Toshiie / Maeda clan
丸岡城
Important Cultural Property (extant tower)Maruoka Castle
城主: Shibata Katsutoyo / Arima clan
上田城
National Historic SiteUeda Castle
城主: Sanada Masayuki / Sanada clan
躑躅ヶ崎館(武田氏館)
National Historic SiteTsutsujigasaki Yakata (Takeda Clan Residence)
城主: Takeda Shingen / Takeda clan
春日山城
National Historic SiteKasugayama Castle
城主: Uesugi Kenshin / Uesugi clan
岐阜城
National Historic SiteGifu Castle
城主: Nikaidō clan (Inabayama Castle) / Saitō Dōsan / Oda Nobunaga
駿府城
National Historic SiteSunpu Castle
城主: Imagawa clan / Toyotomi Ujitsugu / Tokugawa Ieyasu
清洲城
Reconstructed keep (rebuilt 1989)Kiyosu Castle
城主: Oda Nobunaga (during unification of Owari)
高遠城
National Historic SiteTakato Castle
城主: Takeda Shingen / Hoshina Masayuki
岡崎城
National Historic SiteOkazaki Castle
城主: Tokugawa Ieyasu
甲府城(舞鶴城)
National Historic SiteKōfu Castle (Maizuru Castle)
城主: Hashiba Hidekatsu / Tokugawa Yoshinao
浜松城
National Historic SiteHamamatsu Castle
城主: Tokugawa Ieyasu
小牧山城
National Historic SiteKomakiyama Castle
城主: Oda Nobunaga
津城
National Historic SiteTsu Castle
城主: Tōdō Takatora
吉田城
National Historic SiteYoshida Castle
城主: Makino Narimitsu / Matsudaira clan / Matsui-Matsudaira clan
掛川城
National Historic Site; wooden reconstruction of original towerKakegawa Castle
城主: Yamauchi Kazutoyo / Ota clan