bunruicodeです:001003
bumon_total_enのfunction01.phpの部分です:6
bumon_total_zhのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_koのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_esのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_deのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_itのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_ptのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_frのfunction01.phpの部分です:6
bumon_total_ruのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_ukのfunction01.phpの部分です:1
bumon_total_jpのfunction01.phpの部分です:11
Castle in Gifu in Japan| Awesome Search Japan

Awesome Search Japan

Castle in Gifu

bumon_total_enです:6
bumon_total_zhです:1
bumon_total_koです:1
bumon_total_esです:1
bumon_total_deです:1
bumon_total_itです:1
bumon_total_ptです:1
bumon_total_frです:6
bumon_total_ruです:1
bumon_total_ukです:1
bumon_total_jpです:11
1.Kanō Castle
Kanō Castle (加納城, Kanō-jō) was a hirajirō-style Japanese castle located in the city of Gifu, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. It was one of the few castles built after the Battle of Sekigahara and establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate and was used as an administrative center of Kanō Domain under the end of the Edo period, but only its ruins, including the base of the tenshu and stone walls, remain today.[1] The ruins were designated National Historic Site in 1983.[2]
Wikipedia  detail  
2.Kawate Castle
Kawate Castle (川手城, Kawate-jō) was a castle that existed between the Nanboku-chō period and the Sengoku period. Its ruins are located in the present-day city of Gifu, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. An alternative way to write its name in Japanese is 革手城, which has the same pronunciation.[1] It replaced Nagamori Castle as the base of operations for the area and served as home for regional shugo until Saitō Dōsan switched to Inabayama Castle. After its demolition, earthen mounds still remained, but they, too, were broken down to help with the construction of Kanō Castle.
Wikipedia  detail  
3.Gifu Castle
Gifu Castle (岐阜城, Gifu-jō) is a Japanese castle located in the city of Gifu, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. Along with Mount Kinka and the Nagara River, it is one of the main symbols of the city. The castle is also known as Inabayama Castle (稲葉山城, Inabayama-jō). It was designated a National Historic Site in 2011.[1]
Wikipedia  detail  
4.Kurono Castle
Kurono Castle (黒野城, Kurono-jō) was a castle built in Mino Province in Japan in 1597. Though the castle spanned the Sengoku and Edo periods, it barely did so as the castle was demolished in 1610. The castle supported the Saitō, Oda and Toyotomi clans. The castle was built by Katō Sadayasu in 1597. Though Sadayasu supported the Toki clan, Katō Mitsuyasu, his father, supported the Saitō clan and Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who provided many of the stones for the construction of the castle. Mitsuyasu join in the invasions of Korea, but died of illness during his trip home in 1593, putting Sadayasu in charge of construction.
Wikipedia  detail  
5.Sagiyama Castle
Sagiyama Castle (鷺山城, Sagiyama-jō) was a castle built in Mino Province in Japan during the late-Heian period (late 12th century); it was destroyed during the Sengoku period in the mid-16th century. The castle's ruins are located in the present-day city of Gifu, Gifu Prefecture. It stood at the peak of Mount Sagi, which was only 68 m (223 ft). Because the castle was built as a residence and not a defensive fortress, its location on a small mountain was of little consequence.
Wikipedia  detail  
6.Nagamori Castle
Nagamori Castle (長森城, Nagamori-jō) was a castle built in Mino Province, Japan, by Tosanobō Shōshun (土佐坊昌俊), in 1185, and lasted from the Heian period to the early Sengoku period. It is located in the Kiridōshi area of the city of Gifu, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. After the castle was dismantled in the beginning of the Sengoku period, the Kiridōshi Jin'ya was built on the same spot. It served as the base for the area shugo until the construction of Kawate Castle nearby.
Wikipedia  detail  


言語は:jp:jp
gengo_link:en