Victorious in the
Gosannen War,
Fujiwara no Kiyohira relocated his seat from
Iwayadō Castle, in present-day Esashi Ward,
Ōshū City, Iwate prefecture, to a new location on Mount Kanzan in what is now Hiraizumi, sometime between the year 1090 to 1100 AD. There appear to be three main reasons for his choice of site. First was its location directly on the
Ōshū Kaidō, the main highway leading south to the capital and other major cities and north to the lands he controlled. Secondly it was determined to be the center of his realm, as measured from the
Shirakawa Barrier in the south to
Sotogahama in present-day
Aomori Prefecture in the north. Thirdly the location is on the south side of the Koromo River, in what had traditionally been Japanese (as opposed to
Emishi) territory. The palace was used by his son
Fujiwara no Motohira, grandson
Fujiwara no Hidehira and great-grandson
Fujiwara no Yasuhira. However, the palace was burned to the ground in 1189, when
Minamoto no Yoritomo destroyed the North Fujiwara clan. The name "Yanagi-no-gosho" is not contemporary and appears to have been derived from the legend of
Minamoto no Yoshitsune during the
Muromachi period. In the
Azuma Kagami, the palace is referred to as simply the "Hiraizumikan" (Hiraizumi residence). The site was lost for many years and there was speculation that it had been swept away by changes in the course of the
Kitakami River over the centuries. However, from 1969, excavations confirmed the location and a detailed survey was conducted over six years from 1988. The palace site has a length of 725 meters and maximum width of 212 meters, and is bordered by the Kitami River to the east and the Nekomagafuchi River to the west. The two rivers are joined by moats, and the center section of the palace was protected by a wooden
palisade. Excavated artifacts were abundant, and include Chinese white porcelain vases, large
Tokoname ceramic pots, various wooden artifacts and earthenware dishes. The foundations of several buildings and the outlines of what was once pond in the gardens were uncovered. The area received protection as a National Historic Site in 1997, together with two sites in the city of
Ōshū, Iwate; the
Shirotoridate ruins and the
Chōjagahara temple ruins. It was included in the original 2006 nomination of "Hiraizumi - Cultural Landscape Associated with Pure Land Buddhist Cosmology". However, it was removed from the nomination after the failure to secure inscription in 2008, although there are continuing efforts to secure its inclusion through future extension. The site was opened as a park in April 2010, with many of the artifacts discovered on display at the Yanagi-no-Gosho Museum at site. ==See also==