The location of Saga Castle was originally a fortified village under the control of the
Ryūzōji clan, warlords of a small area of northern
Kyūshū in the
Muromachi period. After
Ryūzōji Takanobu was defeated by a coalition of
Shimazu and
Arima forces in 1584, his retainer
Nabeshima Naoshige gained control of the castle. Naoshige allied the clan with
Toyotomi Hideyoshi and gained personal distinction during the
Japanese invasions of Korea, during which time he befriended noted castle architect
Katō Kiyomasa and future
Shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu. Following the
Battle of Sekigahara, the Nabeshima clan was confirmed in its holdings in
Hizen province, and Naoshige’s son,
Nabeshima Katsushige became 1st
daimyō of
Saga Domain. Naoshige began work on rebuilding the castle with the approval of the
Tokugawa Shogunate beginning in 1602, with the work completed under Katsushige by 1611. The original structure included a five-storey
donjon surrounded by a system of 80-metre wide
moats. Unusually, the moats are not surmounted by stone walls, but by earthen ramparts tall enough to conceal the inner fortifications. These ramparts were also planted with pine and camphor trees for additional concealment, which lent the castle its nickname. A fire in 1726 destroyed most of the castle structures, including the donjon. The palace portion was restored two years later in the outer
bailey, which was the centre of the Saga domain government for most of the Edo period. Another fire occurred in 1835, after which the buildings were reconstructed by Saga domain’s final
daimyō Nabeshima Naomasa. After the
Meiji Restoration, the castle remained the location for the local government offices. However, the castle was occupied in 1874 by former politician and samurai
Etō Shinpei and his following of disgruntled
samurai in the
Saga Rebellion. The rebels were defeated by military force, during which most of the buildings in the castle were burned down. Since 1874, the castle grounds have been used as the site for a court building and a
prefectural office, and in 1883 it became a junior school. The buildings were eventually replaced by modern school buildings. In 1953, one of the surviving gates of the castle was proclaimed a Saga Prefectural
Important Cultural Property (PICP). It gained national protection (ICP) in 1957. From 2001 to 2004 the main portion of the castle was restored. It is now houses the Saga Castle History Museum and is the largest wooden castle reconstruction in Japan. In 2006, Saga Castle was listed as one of the
100 Fine Castles of Japan by the Japan Castle Foundation. Saga Castle is also the castle where
Yamamoto Tsunetomo, the
orator of
Hagakure, worked. ==See also==