Title The Construction of Matsumoto Castle

  • Nagano
Topic(s):
Castles/Palaces
Medium/Media of Use:
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Text Length:
251-500
FY Prepared:
2022
Associated Tourism Board:
Matsumoto City

松本城の築城


松本城の築城


(1)石川家の入城

石川数正(1593年没)は、徳川幕府を開いた徳川家康(1543-1616)の長年の家来であった。家康の生誕地である岡崎城の警備を任されていたほどである。しかし、1585年、数正は突然、豊臣秀吉(1537-1598)と同盟を結び、その見返りとして和泉国を治めることを許された。1590年、秀吉が小笠原氏を松本城から追い出すと、石川氏を後継者に選んだ。


(2) 天守閣の建設

数正と長男の石川康長(1554-164)は、城下町を拡充し、松本城の整備に着手した。数正は入城からわずか3年で亡くなったが、康長は大天守、乾小天守、渡櫓を完成させた。


18世紀の松本の歴史と地理に関する書物『信府統記』には、築城の初期段階が描かれている。


「数正は二の丸に屋敷(古山地御殿)を構え、城の配置を考え始めた。天守閣を建て、最外堀を掘り、堤防を高くして石垣を積み、渡櫓、黒門、太鼓門を建て、塀を直し、三の丸の門に櫓を建てた。また、総堀の塀の大部分を築き、城内の屋敷も修造した。また、城の内外に武士の住宅を建設した。


江戸時代(1603~1867)の松本城


(1) 歴代城主

江戸時代、松本城は6家23代の城主によって統治された。松本城は、松本藩(現在の長野県の中信地区にほぼ一致)の行政の中心地であった。この時代、全国は数百の藩に分かれており、大名は幕府の命令によって支配者の任免が可能であった。幕府に忠実な大名は、より立地条件のよい領地に移封されたり、米の単位である「石高」を増やされたりすることがあった。松本藩は、その立地条件と俸禄の高さから、将軍家と密接な関係を持つ大名が多く配された。


名字 名前 統治期間
Ishikawa Kazumasa 1590–1592
Yasunaga 1592–1613
Ogasawara Hidemasa 1613–1615
Tadazane (Tadamasa) 1615–1617
Toda Yasunaga 1617–1632
Yasunao 1633–1633
Matsudaira Naomasa 1633–1638
Hotta Masamori 1638–1642
Mizuno Tadakiyo 1642–1647
Tadamoto 1647–1668
Tadanao 1668–1713
Tadachika 1713–1718
Tadamoto 1718–1723
Tadatsune 1723–1725
徳川幕府の直轄領時代
Toda Mitsuchika 1726–1732
Mitsuo 1732–1756
Mitsuyasu 1756–1759
Mitsumasa 1759–1774
Mitsuyoshi 1774–1786
Mitsuyuki 1786–1800
Mitsutsura 1800–1837
Mitsutsune 1837–1845
Mitsuhisa 1845–1869

家名 官位 石高
1石≈ 180L
前職 次職
石川 伯耆守(伯耆国の守護):数正

玄蕃頭(寺社奉行・外務奉行):康長
80,000 koku Izumi Province 改易除封
小笠原 信濃守(信濃国の守護):秀政

右近大夫(右近の第五位の判官):忠政
80,000 koku Shinano Province,
Iida domain
Harima Province, Akashi domain (10,000 koku)
戸田 丹波守(丹波国の守護):康長

佐渡守(佐渡国の守護):康直
70,000 koku Kōzuke Province, Takasaki domain Harima Province, Akashi domain (70,000 koku)
松平 出羽守(出羽国の守護):直政 70,000 koku Echizen Province,
Ōno domain
Izumo Province, Matsue domain (186,000 koku)
堀田 加賀守(加賀国の守護):正盛 100,000 koku Musashi Province, Kawagoe domain Shimōsa Province, Sakura domain (110,000 koku)
水野 隼人正(隼人の司令官):忠清およびその他

出羽守(出羽国の守護):忠職およびその他

日向守(日向国の守護):忠幹(1718-1723)
70,000 koku Mikawa Province, Yoshida domain 改易除封
戸田 丹波守(丹波国の守護) 60,000 koku Shima Province,
Toba domain
廃藩置県

(2) 主な出来事

以下は、松本城とその周辺の藩の歴史の中で起こった重要な出来事を記した年表である。

Year 出来事 領主
1504 島立貞永が深志城を築城する。
1550 武田信玄、深志へ攻め込み、小笠原長時を撤退させる。信玄、深志城の改修に着手。
1582 織田信長が武田勝頼(1546-1582)を破り、武田家を滅ぼす。小笠原貞慶が深志城を領有し、松本城と改名する。
1590 小笠原氏、関東に転封。。豊臣秀吉が石川数正に松本城を与える。 Ishikawa
1593 大天守、乾小天守、渡櫓の築造が進む。
1600 関ヶ原の戦いで石川家が徳川家康に加勢する。
1613 石川康長が公金横領にからむ幕府内の派閥争い(大久保長安事件)に巻き込まれ、家康によって権力の座から追われる。小笠原秀政が松本城を支配する。 Ogasawara
1614 小笠原家、大坂冬の陣で徳川方につく。
1615 小笠原秀政と長男の小笠原忠長が大坂夏の陣で戦死。
1617 戸田康長、松本城の支配権を獲得。城の北側に武士の居住地を作る。 Toda
1633 松平直政、松本城を任される。辰巳附櫓、月見櫓などの増築を行う。 Matsudaira
1649 水野忠元、松本藩の検地を行う。 Mizuno
1686 北部の農民が藩から課せられた高い年貢に抗議する。リーダーが捕らえられ、磔にされる。
1725 水野忠恒が江戸城内で刀で人を斬りかかったため、水野家は改易する。水野家不在の間、城下町の整備が行われる。
1726 松本城が一時幕府の直轄となり、その後再び戸田家が城主となる。 Toda
1727 本丸御殿が焼失。その後、二の丸御殿、古山地御殿にその機能を移す。
1743 戸田家、幕府より5万石の幕府領を預かる。
1760 信濃国(松本市を含む)において、中馬に対する取締りが問題となる。
1775 松本で大火が発生する。二の丸、三の丸の一部が焼失する。
1793 藩校「崇教館」開校。
1803 松本で再び火災が発生し、街の大部分でも大火が発生。武家屋敷、寺院など数カ所に被害を受けたり、破壊されたりした。
1816 松本城下の北方の安曇野に拾ヶ堰が造られる。
1825 松本藩北部で、米価の大幅な値上げに反対する数万人の農民の騒動が起こる。
1832 松本と信州新町間に犀川通船開通
1854 大地震により城下町の多くの建物が倒壊する。
1862 松本藩士が江戸でイギリス兵2名を殺害する。
1863 松本藩、浦賀湾警備への協力を命じられる。
1864 松本藩、第一次長州征伐への参加を命じられる。和田峠で水戸藩の浪士が松本藩の軍を破る。
1865 松本で大火が発生し、南部の住宅地が被害を受ける。松本藩、第二次長州征伐への参加を命じられ、広島に兵を派遣する。
1866 松本藩南部で米価の高騰に反対する農民の騒動(一揆)が起こる。
1868 松本藩、新政府に恭順の意を示し、北越戦争に参加する。
1869 松本藩最後の大名戸田光久、天皇に領地を明け渡す。
1870 神仏分離令が出され廃仏毀釈が始まる。
1871 国藩体制が廃止され、松本藩は松本県となる。城郭が取り壊され、陸軍省に移管される。松本県は筑摩県と改称され、城の二の丸に県庁が置かれる。

The Construction of Matsumoto Castle


(1) The Arrival of the Ishikawa Family

Ishikawa Kazumasa (d.1592) was a longtime retainer of Tokugawa Ieyasu (1543–1616), the eventual founder of the Tokugawa shogunate. Kazumasa was even entrusted with guarding Okazaki Castle, where Ieyasu had been born. However, in 1585, Kazumasa suddenly deserted and allied himself with Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537–1598). In reward, he was granted control of Izumi Province (now southern Osaka Prefecture). When Hideyoshi removed the Ogasawara family from Matsumoto Castle in 1590, he chose the Ishikawa family to replace them.


(2) Building the Castle Keep

Kazumasa and his eldest son, Ishikawa Yasunaga (1554–1642), improved the castle grounds and began work on Matsumoto Castle. Kazumasa died only three years after his arrival in Matsumoto, but Yasunaga oversaw the completion of the Great Keep, the Northwest Tower, and the Roofed Passage.


The initial stages of construction are described in an eighteenth-century text on the history and geography of the region called Shinpu tōki (Compiled Chronicles of Matsumoto):


“Kazumasa built [the Kosanji Goten] in the second bailey and started planning the layout of the castle. Yasunaga continued his father’s work: he erected the keep, dug the outermost moat, increased the height of the earthen embankments, then laid the stone foundation for the castle, built the Roofed Passage, Kuromon Gate, and Taikomon Gate, repaired the walls, and built a tower above the gate to the third bailey. He built most of the plaster walls around the outermost moat and repaired the residences within the castle compound. He also built residences for his samurai retainers.”


Matsumoto Castle during the Edo Period (1603–1867)


(1) Lords of the Castle

During the Edo period, Matsumoto Castle was governed by 23 successive lords from six families. The castle was the administrative center of Matsumoto domain, which roughly corresponds to what is now the Chūshin region of Nagano Prefecture. At this time, the country was divided into hundreds of such domains, and daimyos were appointed to govern them by order of the Tokugawa shogunate. Daimyos who were loyal to the shogunate would often be relocated to more prestigious domains or given an increased stipend, which was measured in units of rice called koku. Matsumoto’s strategic location and subsequently large stipend made it desirable, and the daimyos that governed the domain were often closely related to the shogun or his family.


Family Name Given Name Period of Rule
Ishikawa Kazumasa 1590–1592
Yasunaga 1592–1613
Ogasawara Hidemasa 1613–1615
Tadamasa (Tadazane) 1615–1617
Toda Yasunaga 1617–1632
Yasunao 1633–1633
Matsudaira Naomasa 1633–1638
Hotta Masamori 1638–1642
Mizuno Tadakiyo 1642–1647
Tadamoto 1647–1668
Tadanao 1668–1713
Tadachika 1713–1718
Tadamoto 1718–1723
Tadatsune 1723–1725
Period of Direct Control by Tokugawa Shogunate
Toda Mitsuchika 1726–1732
Mitsuo 1732–1756
Mitsuyasu 1756–1759
Mitsumasa 1759–1774
Mitsuyoshi 1774–1786
Mitsuyuki 1786–1800
Mitsutsura 1800–1837
Mitsutsune 1837–1845
Mitsuhisa 1845–1869

Family High-Level Government Positions Stipend (kokudaka)
1 koku ≈ 180L
Previous Post Next Post
Ishikawa Hōki no kami (“Lord of Hōki Province”): Kazumasa

Genba no kami (“Chief of Temples and Foreign Affairs”): Yasunaga
80,000 koku Izumi Province Stripped of rank, land seized
Ogasawara Shinano no kami (“Lord of Shinano Province”): Hidemasa

Ukon no taifu (“Fifth-Rank Magistrate of the Right”): Tadazane
80,000 koku Shinano Province,
Iida domain
Harima Province, Akashi domain (10,000 koku)
Toda Tanba no kami (“Lord of Tanba Province”): Yasunaga

Sado no kami (“Lord of Sado Province”): Yasunao
70,000 koku Kōzuke Province, Takasaki domain Harima Province, Akashi domain (70,000 koku)
Matsudaira Dewa no kami (“Lord of Dewa Province”): Naomasa 70,000 koku Echizen Province,
Ōno domain
Izumo Province, Matsue domain (186,000 koku)
Hotta Kaga no kami (“Lord of Kaga Province”): Masamori 100,000 koku Musashi Province, Kawagoe domain Shimōsa Province, Sakura domain (110,000 koku)
Mizuno Hayato no shō (“Commander of the Hayato”): Tadakiyo and others

Dewa no kami (“Lord of Dewa Province”): Tadamoto and others

Hyūga no kami (“Lord of Hyūga Province”): Tadamoto (r. 1718–1723)
70,000 koku Mikawa Province, Yoshida domain Land confiscated
Toda Tanba no kami (“Lord of Tanba Province”) 60,000 koku Shima Province,
Toba domain
Abolition of the domain system (haihan-chiken)

(2) Major Events

This timeline describes some of the key events in the history of Matsumoto Castle and the surrounding domain.

Year Event Ruling Family
1504 Shimadachi Sadanaga constructs Fukashi Castle (according to available records).
1550 Takeda Shingen attacks Fukashi Castle, forcing Ogasawara Nagatoki to flee. Shingen begins renovations of Fukashi Castle.
1582 Oda Nobunaga defeats Takeda Katsuyori, functionally eradicating the Takeda family. After a brief clash between daimyos, Fukashi Castle is claimed by Ogasawara Sadayoshi, who renames the site “Matsumoto Castle.”
1590 The Ogasawara family is transferred to eastern Japan. Toyotomi Hideyoshi awards Matsumoto Castle to Ishikawa Kazumasa. Ishikawa
1593 Construction of the Great Keep, the Northwest Tower, and the Roofed Passage progresses.
1600 The Ishikawa family allies with Tokugawa Ieyasu at the Battle of Sekigahara.
1613 Ishikawa Yasunaga is implicated in a tax scandal (the Ōkubo Nagayasu Jiken) and stripped of his rank by Ieyasu. Ogasawara Hidemasa is granted control of Matsumoto Castle. Ogasawara
1614 The Ogasawara family fights alongside Tokugawa forces during the winter campaign of the Siege of Osaka.
1615 Ogasawara Hidemasa and his eldest son, Ogasawara Tadanaga, die during the summer campaign of the Siege of Osaka.
1617 Toda Yasunaga is granted control of Matsumoto Castle. He builds more residential areas for samurai to the north of the castle. Toda
1633 Matsudaira Naomasa is granted control of Matsumoto Castle. He builds the Southeast Wing and the Moon-Viewing Tower and repairs other parts of the castle. Matsudaira
1649 Mizuno Tadamoto conducts a comprehensive land survey of Matsumoto Domain. Mizuno
1686 Peasants in the north protest the high annual taxes levied on them by the domanial government. The protest leaders are captured and crucified.
1725 The Mizuno family is removed from power after Mizuno Tadatsune attacks someone with his sword on the grounds of Edo Castle. In their absence, development of the castle town is completed.
1726 Matsumoto Castle is briefly placed under the direct control of the Tokugawa shogunate, after which the Toda family is once again granted control of the castle. Toda
1727 The Honmaru Goten burns down. Its functions are transferred to the Ninomaru Goten and the Kosanji Goten.
1743 The shogunate grants the Toda family additional territory valued at 50,000 koku.
1760 Shinano Province (of which Matsumoto is part) becomes embroiled in a legal dispute regarding sanctions on shipping by horseback along public roads.
1775 A large fire breaks out in Matsumoto, and parts of the second and third bailey are damaged.
1793 The domain school Sōkyōkan is opened.
1803 Another fire breaks out in Matsumoto, and large sections of the city burn. Several samurai residences and temples are damaged or destroyed.
1816 An irrigation canal called “Jikkasegi” is built in OAzumino, a village to the north of Matsumoto Castle.
1825 Protests erupt in northern Matsumoto domain as tens of thousands of peasants rise up against a sharp increase in the price of rice.
1832 The Saigawa Canal is expanded to pass through Matsumoto.
1854 A powerful earthquake damages many buildings at the castle and in the town.
1862 A samurai from Matsumoto murders two British soldiers in Edo.
1863 Matsumoto domain is ordered to help guard Uraga Bay.
1864 Matsumoto domain is ordered to participate in the First Chōshū Expedition. Forces from Matsumoto are defeated by masterless samurai (ronin) from Mito domain at the Wada Pass.
1865 Fire breaks out in Matsumoto, damaging residential areas in the south. Matsumoto domain is ordered to participate in the Second Chōshū Expedition and dispatches troops to Hiroshima.
1866 A protest erupts in the south of Matsumoto domain as peasants rally against rising rice prices.
1868 Matsumoto domain allies with the new imperial government and participates in the Battle of Hokuetsu in Hokkaido.
1869 Toda Mitsuhisa, the last daimyo of Matsumoto, surrenders his territory to the emperor.
1870 An anti-Buddhist movement begins after an imperial edict separates the previously syncretic religions of Buddhism and Shinto.
1871 The shogunal domain system is abolished, and Matsumoto domain becomes Matsumoto Prefecture. Several castle gates are demolished, and the castle is placed under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of War. Matsumoto Prefecture is soon renamed Chikuma Prefecture, and a prefectural office is established in the castle’s second bailey.
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