Site of Katsumoto Castle
castle
Site of Katsumoto Castle
勝本城跡
Overview
The hilltop Katsumoto Castle was a hastily built and short-lived citadel intended for use by the warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537–1598) during an invasion of the Korean Peninsula.
Katsumoto Castle on Iki Island was built in just four months in 1591 as a staging base for Toyotomi Hideyoshi's planned invasion of Korea, intended to give him a personal command post 80 meters above the harbor where the expeditionary fleet would anchor. Hideyoshi's illness prevented him from ever using it, and the invasion failed. The Tokugawa shogunate later had the castle decommissioned as part of diplomatic reconciliation with Korea. Today the site is a park above the village of Katsumoto, with the entrance gate and most of the surrounding ramparts intact. The corner stones were removed, a standard method at the time for disabling a fortification without full demolition.
Practical info
- Japanese name
- 勝本城跡
- Nearest station
- Karatsu Station (60+ min drive)
- Payment
- Cash only
- Reservations
- not required
Good for
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