Ishigaki-yama Castle

石垣山城 · Ishigakiyama-jo

D Defense 42/100
D Defense 52/100

Where Hideyoshi built a complete fortress in secret behind a mountain, then revealed it overnight to psychologically break the last castle that had never been conquered.

#126 — Continued 100 Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
Free Free
Hours
00:00 – 23:59
Nearest Station
Odawara Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Odakyu Line / Shinkansen)
Walk from Station
90 min

Bus also available

Time Needed
1.5–2 hours including the approach walk and full ruins exploration.

Free admission. The castle ruins are a public park maintained by Odawara City. Open at all times.

Why Visit Ishigaki-yama Castle?

Ishigaki-yama Castle has one of the best historical stories in Japan. The 'one-night castle' episode — Hideyoshi secretly constructing an entire fortress in 80 days to appear overnight above the besieged Odawara — is extraordinary, and visiting the ridge ruins while looking down toward Odawara Castle makes the story viscerally real. The surviving stone walls are impressive in quality and scale, the forest setting is atmospheric, and the historical significance (this is where Hideyoshi completed the unification of Japan and reassigned the Kanto to Tokugawa Ieyasu, setting up Edo's future) is immense.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

The Castle That Appeared Overnight — Hideyoshi's Greatest Psychological Trick

In 1590, Toyotomi Hideyoshi was besieging the Hojo clan in Odawara Castle, the most formidable fortress in eastern Japan. Rather than assault it directly, he built an entirely new castle on the mountain ridge behind Odawara — in secret, hidden behind the trees and a wooden screen. After 80 days of construction, Hideyoshi ordered the trees cleared. The Hojo garrison in Odawara suddenly saw a complete fortress with stone walls, towers, and an entire headquarters encampment looking down at them from the mountain. The psychological shock contributed directly to the Hojo's decision to surrender. The legend says it appeared 'overnight' — it took 80 days, but the effect was the same.

2

Stone Walls Built at Extraordinary Speed

The surviving stone walls of Ishigaki-yama Castle are remarkable for their quality given the speed of construction. Hideyoshi mobilized an enormous workforce — reportedly 40,000 laborers — and applied the most advanced castle-building techniques of the period. The result was stone walls that rivaled established castles in sophistication, built on a mountain ridge in less than three months. Walking among the remaining stonework today, the technical achievement is immediately apparent.

3

Where Hideyoshi Held His Victory Court

After the Hojo surrendered and Odawara fell, Hideyoshi used Ishigaki-yama Castle as his headquarters for redistributing the entire Kanto region. It was here that he reassigned the immense Hojo territories, relocating Tokugawa Ieyasu from his original domains to the Kanto (including giving Ieyasu Edo Castle as his new base). The decisions made at Ishigaki-yama reshaped the political geography of eastern Japan — including setting the stage for Edo becoming Japan's future capital.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

Ishigaki-yama Castle requires a walk uphill (20–30 minutes from parking, longer from Odawara Station). The reward is substantial stone walls in a forested mountain setting, plus the remarkable historical context — this is where Hideyoshi conducted the decisive moment of his unification of Japan. The 'one-night castle' story is one of the best in Japanese history. Combine with Odawara Castle (visible below in the valley) for the complete 1590 siege story from both sides.

Castle Type

yamajiro

Mountain castle — built on a ridge of the Hakone foothills at approximately 260m elevation, directly overlooking Odawara Castle in the valley below and commanding views across Sagami Bay

Layout Type

renkaku

Compound style — multiple compounds across the ridge top, with the western compound (nishi-kuruwa) providing the dramatic Sagami Bay views and the main compound (honmaru) positioned to overlook Odawara Castle

Main Tower (Tenshu)

Complete ruins — no structures survive above ground. Substantial stone walls (ishigaki) and compound earthworks are the primary surviving features, remarkably well-preserved given the castle's single-use purpose and subsequent abandonment.

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

nozurazumi — Natural stone stacking — the ishigaki stone walls are the defining feature of the site, built at remarkable speed in 1590 and representing early examples of the sophisticated castle stone-wall construction that would reach its peak at Himeji and Edo in the following decades

The stone walls of Ishigaki-yama Castle are its most impressive surviving feature — sections up to 7–8 meters high remain standing across several compounds. The quality of the construction, achieved in 80 days with a massive workforce, demonstrates the extraordinary organizational capacity Hideyoshi had built. The walls use natural stone fitting (nozurazumi) in the manner of the period, but at a scale and quality that exceeded expectations for such rapid construction.

Key Defensive Features

Ridge Elevation Overlooking Odawara Castle

The castle ridge sits approximately 260 meters above sea level, directly above and behind Odawara Castle. The elevation provided Hideyoshi with both strategic observation over the besieged castle below and the psychological domination of looking down on a fortress that had never been taken. The mere existence of Ishigaki-yama as an unassailable point overlooking Odawara fundamentally changed the tactical situation.

Psychological Warfare Design

The castle was not designed primarily for physical defense — it was designed as a tool of psychological warfare. The sudden revelation of an entire fortress overnight (from the Hojo's perspective) undermined their confidence that Odawara was impregnable. Hideyoshi reportedly brought his consorts, tea masters, and entertainers to Ishigaki-yama, conducting elaborate leisure activities in full view of the besieged garrison below — demonstrating total confidence in his position.

Hakone Mountain Approach Control

The ridge position also controlled the mountain route from the Tokaido road through the Hakone pass, which was one of the key supply and communication routes for eastern Japan. Hideyoshi's control of this position cut the Hojo off from potential allies approaching via the mountain road.

Tactical Defense Simulator

Masugata Gate (Square Trap)

The Deadliest Gate in Japan

Outer WallOuter WallInner Bailey Wall First Gate (Ichinomon) Second Gate (Ninomon) KILL ZONE Masugata Courtyard
Attacking Force
1,000 / 1,000 troops
Phase 1: Approach

The attacking force crosses the moat and approaches the outer gate. Defenders hold fire, allowing the enemy to commit.

Castle Defense Layers
Mountain Ridge — Natural Defensive Terrain
· 260m ridge elevation above Odawara valley· Steep approach slopes from multiple directions· Hakone forest concealment (used during construction)
Outer Compounds — Ridge Perimeter
· West compound (nishi-kuruwa) — Sagami Bay views· Well compound (idomaru) — water supply· Outer stone wall sections
Honmaru and Ninomaru — Main Ridge Compounds
· Main compound stone walls (up to 7–8m height)· Second compound· Direct line-of-sight down to Odawara Castle

Historical Context — Ishigaki-yama Castle

Ishigaki-yama Castle was never attacked — its purpose was to make attack unnecessary. By presenting the Hojo with an unassailable position overlooking their own stronghold, Hideyoshi created a strategic situation where continued resistance became psychologically untenable. The castle's 'defense' was achieved by its mere existence rather than by any battle. After the Hojo surrendered, the castle served briefly as Hideyoshi's administrative headquarters before being abandoned — it was always a tool, not a permanent fortress.

The Story of Ishigaki-yama Castle

Originally built 1590 by Toyotomi Hideyoshi
Current form 1590 by Toyotomi Hideyoshi
    1590

    April: Toyotomi Hideyoshi begins his campaign to destroy the Hojo clan — the last major daimyo power refusing to submit to his authority. He assembles an army estimated at over 200,000 men, the largest military force assembled in Japanese history to that point, to besiege Odawara Castle.

    1590

    April–July: While the main army besieges Odawara, Hideyoshi secretly mobilizes 40,000 laborers to construct a new castle on the ridge above Odawara. The site is screened from view by the forest and wooden partitions. The construction continues for approximately 80 days — an extraordinary feat requiring massive organizational capacity.

    1590

    July: Hideyoshi orders the trees and screens cleared. The Hojo garrison in Odawara, which had maintained confidence in their castle's impregnability throughout the siege, suddenly sees a complete stone-walled fortress on the ridge above them. The psychological impact is immediate and decisive. The Hojo clan surrenders shortly afterward. Hideyoshi himself reportedly said 'this is a one-night castle' (ichiya-jo) — acknowledging the miraculous speed, though it actually took 80 days.

    1590

    Following the Hojo surrender, Hideyoshi uses Ishigaki-yama as his headquarters for redistributing the vast Hojo territories across the Kanto plain. Tokugawa Ieyasu is relocated from Mikawa and Totomi to the Kanto region, with Edo as his new main castle. The political decisions made at this mountain ridge reshape eastern Japan permanently.

    1590

    After completing the redistribution of Kanto territories, Ishigaki-yama Castle is abandoned — its single purpose fulfilled. Hideyoshi had no need of a permanent garrison castle at this location once the Hojo were destroyed. The site is never reoccupied militarily.

Seen This Castle Before?

TV

NHK taiga dramas covering Toyotomi Hideyoshi

The 'one-night castle' moment at Ishigaki-yama is one of the most dramatized episodes in any NHK historical drama covering Hideyoshi — most famously in 'Hideyoshi' (1996) and other productions covering the Odawara campaign and the completion of Japan's unification.

game

Nobunaga's Ambition / Taiko Risshiden (Koei historical strategy games)

Ishigaki-yama Castle appears in multiple Koei historical strategy games covering the Sengoku period, often as a key event location for the completion of Hideyoshi's unification campaign.

Did You Know?

  • The '一夜城' (ichiya-jo — one-night castle) legend is one of the most celebrated stories in Japanese history, but the reality is even more impressive than the myth. Building a complete stone-walled castle in 80 days required mobilizing approximately 40,000 laborers, an extraordinary supply chain of stone, timber, and food, and a level of project management that modern construction engineers still discuss as a remarkable achievement. The 'overnight' element refers to the sudden revelation to the Hojo, not the actual construction timeline.
  • After the Hojo surrendered and Hideyoshi completed his redistribution of Kanto territories at Ishigaki-yama, he brought his elderly mother Omandokoro to the castle from Kyoto — a visit that was simultaneously an act of filial devotion and a display of power, showing the Kanto lords that Hideyoshi felt so secure he could bring his family to a newly conquered territory. The visit was extensively recorded in contemporary sources.
  • Hideyoshi's tea master Sen no Rikyu accompanied him to Ishigaki-yama, and tea ceremonies were held in the castle during the siege — Hideyoshi hosting elaborate tea gatherings while his army maintained the blockade of Odawara far below. The image of Japan's supreme warlord conducting refined tea ceremonies while conducting the largest military operation in Japanese history is quintessentially Hideyoshi: the simultaneously brutal and refined man who unified a country.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

D 42/100
  • Accessibility 4 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 7 /20
  • Historical Value 14 /20
  • Visual Impact 10 /20
  • Facilities 7 /20

Defense Score

D 52/100
  • Natural Position 16 /20
  • Wall Complexity 10 /20
  • Layout Strategy 12 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 9 /20
  • Siege Resistance 5 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Spring (April–May) and autumn (October–November) for the forested ridge at its most beautiful. The site is never crowded. Morning visits provide clearer air for views toward Sagami Bay and Mount Fuji on exceptionally clear days.

Time Needed

1.5–2 hours including the approach walk and full ruins exploration.

Insider Tip

Stand at the western compound (nishi-kuruwa) and look toward Sagami Bay — on clear days you can see the ocean that Hideyoshi's supply ships crossed to provision his army. Then walk to the main compound and look down toward where Odawara Castle stands in the valley. The spatial relationship between the two castles — the psychology of looking down at the 'impregnable' fortress from above — makes the 1590 siege immediately understandable. This is one of the few castle sites where the landscape itself tells the story.

Getting There

Nearest station: Odawara Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Odakyu Line / Shinkansen)
Walk from station: 90 minutes
Bus: Seasonal bus service to the castle ruins from Odawara Station (approximately 20 minutes by bus). Check Odawara city transport website for current schedules. Walking is possible but the route is steeply uphill for a significant distance.
Parking: Parking available near the ruins entrance. Free. Car is the most convenient access outside of seasonal bus service.
Accessible with a JR Pass

Admission

Free Entry

Free admission. The castle ruins are a public park maintained by Odawara City. Open at all times.

Opening Hours

Open 00:00 – 23:59

Open year-round at all hours. The walk up from the base takes approximately 20–30 minutes. The ruins are set in forested mountain terrain — appropriate footwear recommended. Summer visits can be hot and humid; spring and autumn are ideal.

Facilities

  • English guides
  • Audio guide
  • Wheelchair access
  • Restrooms
  • Gift shop
  • Food nearby

Nearby Castles

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get to Ishigaki-yama Castle?

The nearest station is Odawara Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Odakyu Line / Shinkansen). It is approximately a 90-minute walk from the station. Seasonal bus service to the castle ruins from Odawara Station (approximately 20 minutes by bus). Check Odawara city transport website for current schedules. Walking is possible but the route is steeply uphill for a significant distance. Parking: Parking available near the ruins entrance. Free. Car is the most convenient access outside of seasonal bus service. Accessible with a JR Pass.

How much does Ishigaki-yama Castle cost to enter?

Ishigaki-yama Castle is free to enter. Free admission. The castle ruins are a public park maintained by Odawara City. Open at all times.

Is Ishigaki-yama Castle worth visiting?

Ishigaki-yama Castle has one of the best historical stories in Japan. The 'one-night castle' episode — Hideyoshi secretly constructing an entire fortress in 80 days to appear overnight above the besieged Odawara — is extraordinary, and visiting the ridge ruins while looking down toward Odawara Castle makes the story viscerally real. The surviving stone walls are impressive in quality and scale, the forest setting is atmospheric, and the historical significance (this is where Hideyoshi completed the unification of Japan and reassigned the Kanto to Tokugawa Ieyasu, setting up Edo's future) is immense.

What are the opening hours of Ishigaki-yama Castle?

Ishigaki-yama Castle is open 00:00 – 23:59 . Open year-round at all hours. The walk up from the base takes approximately 20–30 minutes. The ruins are set in forested mountain terrain — appropriate footwear recommended. Summer visits can be hot and humid; spring and autumn are ideal.

How long should I spend at Ishigaki-yama Castle?

Plan on spending 1.5–2 hours including the approach walk and full ruins exploration. at Ishigaki-yama Castle. Stand at the western compound (nishi-kuruwa) and look toward Sagami Bay — on clear days you can see the ocean that Hideyoshi's supply ships crossed to provision his army. Then walk to the main compound and look down toward where Odawara Castle stands in the valley. The spatial relationship between the two castles — the psychology of looking down at the 'impregnable' fortress from above — makes the 1590 siege immediately understandable. This is one of the few castle sites where the landscape itself tells the story.