This castle was actually used as a lodge for one night for Tokugawa Iemitsu’s visit to Kyoto in 1634, but was never used after that. In 1682, the shogunate created
Minakuchi Domain for the Katō clan, and transferred control of the castle to the new domain.
Katō Yoshiaki had been one of the most powerful generals under
Toyotomi Hideyoshi and later under
Tokugawa Ieyasu, and had been awarded with
Aizu Domain. His son, Katō Akinari initially had a
kokudaka of 400,000
koku, but through a combination of mismanagement, natural disasters and political intrigue, had been demoted and reassigned to a 10,000
koku smallholding in remote
Iwami Province. His son, Kato Akitomo had managed to increase this to 20,000
koku and was rewarded with the creation of Minakuchi Domain. The Katō clan ruled the area (with a brief exception) to the end of the Edo Period. They kept the shogun's palace in repair, in the event that he should ever chose to return, but lived in a secondary area at the northwest of the castle. After the
Meiji restoration, the castle was destroyed and its buildings were sold off. The site of the castle was used as a baseball field and parking lot for Minakuchi High School. However, in 1991 some walls, two gates, and a
yagura were reconstructed. This reconstructed
yagura houses the . The castle is a five minutes walk from
Minakuchi Jonan Station on the
Ohmi Railway Main Line. == Literature ==