Hiroshima Castle

Attractions > Other Cities and Areas > Japanese Castles > Hiroshima

About | Access | Hotels & Lodging | Hours & Fees

Hiroshima Castle stands in the modern Hiroshima landscape
Hiroshima Castle stands in the modern Hiroshima landscape

 

About

Hiroshima Castle Japan by Nagaoka Sotoshi (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Nagaoka Sotoshi (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Hiroshima Castle is a castle in Hiroshima Japan that was originally built in the 1590s. Mori Terumoto, a powerful feudal lord at the time, built Hiroshima Castle in 1589 and it became an important seat of power in Western Japan. The original castle was destroyed by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 and the current structure(s) are a semi-faithful "replicas" of the original. Interestingly, Hiroshima Castle (also called the "Carp Castle"; 鯉城) was one of the few castles allowed to remain standing after the Meiji Restoration and was declared a National Treasure in 1931... but unfortunately met its fate in WW2. Only thirteen years later, in 1958, the "Main Keep" of the castle was re-built in concrete with an attractive, partially wooden exterior and the inside developed as an informative museum on the castle's history and Japanese castles in general. Recent reconstruction of the castle were built using traditional Japanese building methods and materials of the time. These "recent" reconstruction include the castle's main gate and two turrets adjoined by a long storehouse.

Hiroshima Castle Gate Bridge by redlegsfan21 (CC BY-SA 2.0)
redlegsfan21 (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Hiroshima Castle is a "Flatland" Castle (as opposed to a "Hill Top" castle) and was built on a flat "plain" area which was located on a delta of the Otagawa river. When the castle was built, there was no Hiroshima city or town at the time and Hiroshima town to city developed around the castle as a castle town, whereby the castle was both the physical and economical center of the city. The castle never saw any action (was never attacked) during Japan's "Medieval Times" (exactly the reason for building a stronghold to prevent, deter and protect the "leader") but it did serve as a.) the Imperial General Headquarters was based there during the First Sino-Japanese War in 1894–1895 and b.) the headquarters of the 2nd General Army and Fifth Division, stationed there to stop the Allied invasion of the Japanese mainland.

Hiroshima Castle wall tower by GFDL (CC BY 3.0)
GFDL (CC BY 3.0)

If you are in Hiroshima as a tourist, please consider visiting the Castle.  Hiroshima has the unfortunate distinction (and notoriety) of being one of only two cities to have been bombed by a nuclear device which in turn has brought many people to visit Hiroshima for that reason but... Hiroshima has much history before that event and its castle is a great example of Japanese culture for hundreds of years before the bomb.  The "Replica" castle is well done and the castle is very beautiful.  Furthermore it is just a short walk from the peace park and easy to visit.

Please visit our Japanese Castles page to find more castles in Japan.

Data

Name: Hiroshima Caslte (広島城 - Hiroshima Jyou)

Original Year Built: 1589

Type: Flatland Castle 平城

Class: Large Castle

Main Tower Size: 5 Stories

Features: Main Tower (Tenshu), Towers (Turrets), Gates, Bridges, Water Moats, Stone Walls

Condition: Half Reconstruction, half Genuine Reconstruction

Founder: Mori Terumoto

Timeline

1589 - Construction on the castle was started under the orders of Mori Terumoto.

1599 - The Tenshu (Main Tower) was completed.

1600 - The Mori Clan lost half their domain, including this castle.

1871 - After the Meiji Restoration the castle was decommissioned.

1874 - The castle was abondoned.

1945 - The castle was destroyed by the atomic bomb.

1951 - Rebuilt using wood.

1957 - Rebuilt using concrete.

References

Mori Terumoto on Wikipedia - the Daimyo who built the castle.

Hiroshima Castle entrance by Fg2 (CC0 1.0)
Fg2 (CC0 1.0)
Hiroshima Castle in Autumn
Hiroshima Castle in Autumn

 

Access

Closest Train Station: Kamiyacho-Higashi

21-1 Motomachi
Hiroshima, Naka-ku, Hiroshima 730-0011 Japan

Tel: 82-221-7512

from Kamiyacho-nishi or Kamiyacho-higashi tram stop,
Walk: 12 min.
from the Peace Park,
Walk: 15 min.

Google Map

Find a train route and times by Hyperdia & Jorudan

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Hotels & Lodging

Recommended

View a full list of Hotels and Lodging in or nearby Hiroshima Castle.

 

Hours & Fees

Hours: March to November: 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., December to February: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Golden Week and Obon holidays: 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. (last entry 30 minutes before closing)

Closed: December 29 - 31

Cost: Adult (18+): 370 yen, 12-17: 180 yen, under 12 and 65+ are free.

Information presented is based on the time it was created. There may be changes since publication. Please confirm information by visiting the Official Website before visiting.

 

Resources

Website: Hiroshima Castle Homepage

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