Home/Fukui/Sakai/Maruoka Castle — Japan's Oldest Surviving Keep
Fukui· Sakai
🏯 History & Culture

Maruoka Castle — Japan's Oldest Surviving Keep

Published: Jun 2, 2026
Updated: Jun 2, 2026
Maruoka Castleoldest keepsamurai architecturecherry blossomshistoric site
Maruoka Castle — Japan's Oldest Surviving Keep

Maruoka Castle (丸岡城) possesses the oldest surviving castle keep (tenshu) in Japan, constructed in 1576 — a claim disputed with Inuyama Castle, but architectural analysis supports Maruoka's precedence. The two-story wooden keep is small, almost intimate compared to later castles like Himeji or Osaka, but its steep roof tiles (made from stone rather than ceramic), narrow arrow-slit windows, and absence of decorative elements embody the pure martial function of early castle design.

The interior is unrestored — visitors climb the original wooden ladder-stairs (60-degree angle) to the upper floor where castle defenders would have stationed. The view from the top overlooks the Fukui Plain and, on clear days, the Sea of Japan 15 kilometers north. The castle survived earthquakes, wars, and modernization simply because it was too small and remote to warrant destruction. Today, that obscurity preserves a rare example of 16th-century military architecture.

Advertisement

Getting There

Access Information

1-59 Kasumimachi, Maruoka-cho, Sakai City. 20-min bus from Fukui Station (Keifuku Bus). Entry: ¥450 (includes museum). Hours: 8:30–17:00. Cherry blossom illumination (April): 8:30–21:00. Visit duration: 45 minutes.

Insider Guide

Premium
**Climbing the keep:** The interior stairs are nearly vertical ladders — not recommended for those with mobility issues or young children. The second-floor space is small (20 tatami mats) and unheated

Unlock Insider Tips

Booking secrets, hidden viewpoints, and local contacts — exclusively for Premium members.

Get Premium · from $5/month

Book Your Stay Nearby

Find accommodation close to Maruoka Castle — Japan's Oldest Surviving Keep on these trusted booking platforms:

More in Fukui