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on the mountain slope, protected by earthen walls and dry moats, with the only entrance being a steep and narrow path from the south. On the eastern slope of the mountain is the
Eboshigata Hachiman-gu (built in 1480), and since most of the castle ruins are within the precincts of the shrine, the
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and is located at the top of Mount
Eboshigata at an elevation of 182 meters. The site is protected by cliffs on the north and west, and by the Ishikawa River and Amami River to the south and east. Located on the Kōya Kaidō, it commanded a strategic position controlling the main route between
359:'s "History of Japan" and "Jesuit Japan Annual Report", the castellan was a convert to Christianity, and was a base for many converts in the Minamikawachi region. In 1584, the castle was the base for
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367:. In 1587, Christianity was prohibited and Christians were expelled from the area. The castle appears to have been abandoned completely by 1617 and fell into ruins.
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Sansom, George (1961). "A History of Japan: 1334-1615." Stanford, California: Stanford
University Press. pp123–4
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The castle site is preserved as the
Eboshigata Park, which also encompasses the Eboshigata Kofun, a 6th-century
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The castle was completed in 1332 as an outlying fortification of
Kusunoki Masashige's stronghold at
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warrior-monks, with the castle changing hands several times. In 1575, the castle was laid waste by
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Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The
Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co.
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as a base to control their properties in the area. However, per the
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during his conquest of the region; however, it was soon rebuilt by
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Eboshigata Castle is one of the seven castles built by
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Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard
University Press.
377:. The castle ruins are about a 15-minute walk from
331:, control of this castle was contested between the
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537:. Groningen: Toyo Press. pp. 600 pages.
503:(国指定史跡事典) National Historic Site Encyclopedia
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479:(in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs
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405:Foundations of a building in the Honmaru
569:. Tokyo: Kodansha. pp. 200 pages.
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453:List of Historic Sites of Japan (Osaka)
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551:Frederic, Louis (2002). "Chihaya-jō."
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626:Castles in Osaka Prefecture
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533:De Lange, William (2021).
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631:Historic Sites of Japan
383:Nankai Electric Railway
266:located in the city of
147:34.444556°N 135.56472°E
565:Motoo, Hinago (1986).
276:National Historic Site
379:Kawachinagano Station
599:at Wikimedia Commons
152:34.444556; 135.56472
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361:Toyotomi Hideyoshi
325:Minamoto no Yukiie
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481:. Retrieved
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365:Kii Province
345:Oda Nobunaga
337:Miyoshi clan
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190:Site history
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135:34°26′40.4″N
355:missionary
224:Wood, stone
213:In use
150: /
138:135°33′53″E
126:Coordinates
615:Categories
512:4311750404
459:References
357:Luís Fróis
341:Negoro-shū
309:enclosures
301:Mount Kōya
259:is a late
386:Kōya Line
221:Materials
216:1332-1617
182:Condition
473:"烏帽子形城跡"
447:See also
349:Kongō-ji
339:and the
167:Yamajiro
505:. 学生社.
392:Gallery
381:on the
286:History
169:-style
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353:Jesuit
335:, the
372:kofun
305:Sakai
297:Kyoto
248:烏帽子形城
195:Built
185:ruins
30:烏帽子形城
571:ISBN
539:ISBN
507:ISBN
485:2021
429:Moat
198:1332
163:Type
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