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Fushimi Momoyama Castle 伏見桃山城

Fushimi Castle Fushimi Castle
Fushimi Castle Fushimi Castle

A remote and ill-fated fortress built for warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi

Fushimi Castle, also known as Momoyama Castle, is located in a quiet, residential part of southern Kyoto. However, during the Warring States period, it was anything but quiet. Destroyed by an earthquake soon after it was first constructed, the fortress was later the site of a pitched battle and a mass ritual suicide.

Quick Facts

The castle was originally built in the late 16th century by an army of 20,000 to 30,000 workers

Bloodstains from a mass suicide here can be found around Kyoto in salvaged castle materials

An earthquake destroyed the castle only two years after it was first built

How to Get There

Fushimi Momoyama Castle is easily accessible by rail.

From Kyoto Station, take the Kintetsu-Kyoto Line to Kintetsu-Tambabashi Station. From there, it is a 20-minute walk to the castle.

A siege lost

When Toyotomi Hideyoshi died in 1598, the castle was taken over by Tokugawa Ieyasu, who united Japan after the Battle of Sekigahara. When Ieyasu left the castle just before the Sekigahara Battle in 1600, Torii Mototada, a loyal samurai to Ieyasu, famously died while defending the castle during an 13-day siege. Once the enemy declared victory, they took the castle apart and moved it in pieces to other temples and castles throughout Japan.

Bloody floors

When Mototada and his men admitted defeat, they committed ritual suicide, staining the floors of the castle. Legend has it that you can now find these blood-stained floors repurposed as ceilings in many temples in Kyoto, including Genkoan in the northwest.

Today's castle

The modern replica was built in 1964 near the original site of the castle. Apart from the twin keeps, it likely bears little resemblance to the original.

You can walk the grounds freely and admire the twin keeps but only from the outside. Due to the castle's distance from other tourist sites, the grounds are often quiet, making them a great place for a secluded picnic in the spring or autumn.



* The information on this page may be subject to change due to COVID-19.

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