Kanazawa Castle Park — Reconstructed Feudal Fortress
Kanazawa Castle (金沢城) was the seat of the powerful Maeda clan from 1583 to 1868, ruling the Kaga Domain — the wealthiest domain outside the Tokugawa shogunate. The original castle burned multiple times (1602, 1631, 1759) with only the 1788 Ishikawa-mon Gate surviving intact. Recent reconstruction (1990s–2000s) rebuilt the Gojikken Nagaya storehouse (2001), Hishi Yagura turret, and Kahoku-mon Gate using traditional joinery techniques without nails, creating one of Japan's finest castle reconstructions. The castle grounds span 30 hectares of parkland with moats, stone walls, and plazas.
The castle's most impressive feature is its stone walls — built using different techniques from different eras, creating a living textbook of Japanese castle masonry. The walls range from rough-cut boulders (early construction) to precisely fitted cut stones (later refinements). The Ishikawa-mon Gate (石川門, Important Cultural Property) displays the castle's military architecture with its double-tiered design, massive timbers, and defensive features like arrow slits and stone-dropping holes. The castle park is free to enter (only interior of reconstructed buildings charge admission), making it an accessible complement to the adjacent Kenrokuen Garden. Together, they form Kanazawa's historical core.
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