Castle
Nagoya Castle
190 locals recommend,
Location
1-1 Honmaru
Nagoya, Aichi
Tips from locals
Seventy percent of the daimyo feudal lords of the Edi period that laid the foundation for what evolved into modern day Japan had their roots in aichi. The history shaped by these daring men is not a relic of the past but an ongoing story.
Originally built in 1615 by the first Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Nagoya Castle Hommaru Palace was the residence and formal audience hall for his son, the Lord of the Owari Domain. Nagoya’s palace was regarded as a masterpiece, the finest example of Samurai-styled Shoin-zukuri castle architecture, and became the first castle to be designated a National Treasure. It was the most elegant and gorgeous palace of all, richly decorated with gold covered walls and stunning paintings by the famed Kano School, the finest artists of the day.
Originally built in 1615 by the first Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Nagoya Castle Hommaru Palace was the residence and formal audience hall for his son, the Lord of the Owari Domain. Nagoya’s palace was regarded as a masterpiece, the finest example of Samurai-styled Shoin-zukuri castle architecture, a…
Originally built in 1615 by the first Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Nagoya Castle Hommaru Palace was the residence and formal audience hall for his son, the Lord of the Owari Domain. Nagoya’s palace was regarded as a masterpiece, the finest example of Samurai-styled Shoin-zukuri castle architecture, and became the first castle to be designated a National Treasure. It was the most elegant and gorgeous palace of all, richly decorated with gold covered walls and stunning paintings by the famed Kano School, the finest artists of the day.
Originally built in 1615 by the first Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Nagoya Castle Hommaru Palace was the residence and formal audience hall for his son, the Lord of the Owari Domain. Nagoya’s palace was regarded as a masterpiece, the finest example of Samurai-styled Shoin-zukuri castle architecture, a…
Nagoya Castle was constructed on the orders of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA in order to secure an important position on the Tokaido road and to ward off attacks from the direction of Osaka.