Matsuzaka Castle

松阪城 · Matsuzaka-jo

D Defense 42/100
D Defense 52/100

Impressive Momoyama-era stone walls in a pleasant hilltop park — and the finest beef in Japan is waiting in the restaurants below.

#48 — 100 Famous Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
Free Free
Hours
00:00 – 23:59
Nearest Station
Matsusaka Station (JR Kisei Main Line / Kintetsu Yamada Line)
Walk from Station
15 min
Time Needed
45 minutes (ruins) + 1 hour (Matsusaka beef lunch) = 2 hours total

The ruins and Matsuzaka Castle Park are completely free. The adjacent Matsuzaka City Museum (Matsusaka-jo Seki Kinensho) is free. There is no charge for any part of the site.

Why Visit Matsuzaka Castle?

Matsuzaka Castle is best appreciated by visitors who understand that walls without buildings can be more eloquent than concrete tower reconstructions. The kirikomi-hagi stonework here is genuinely excellent, the hilltop park is attractive, and the free admission removes any barrier to stopping. The real incentive for most visitors is the combination: fine castle ruins + Matsusaka beef lunch = a very satisfying few hours in Mie Prefecture.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

Stone Walls That Rival More Famous Castles

Matsuzaka Castle's most striking feature is the quality and height of its surviving stone walls. The walls of the inner compound, built using the kirikomi-hagi (fitted stone) technique characteristic of late 16th-century construction under Gamo Ujisato, rise impressively from the hillside. Castle specialists consistently rank these stone walls among the finest surviving examples of Momoyama-era stonework — impressive given that the castle itself is rarely mentioned outside specialist circles.

2

Gamo Ujisato's Southern Masterpiece

Matsuzaka Castle was built by Gamo Ujisato — one of Oda Nobunaga's most trusted generals and an exceptionally skilled castle builder. Ujisato is better known for his work in the Tohoku region (where he governed Aizu), but Matsuzaka demonstrates his construction skills in the Tokai region. The castle's layout and stonework reflect the sophisticated Momoyama-era design sensibility that Ujisato deployed across his various building projects.

3

Matsusaka Beef Country

Matsusaka is most famous throughout Japan not for its castle but for Matsusaka beef (Matsusaka-gyu) — considered by many Japanese to be the finest Wagyu beef in Japan, surpassing even Kobe beef. The castle park visit naturally combines with a Matsusaka beef meal in the city center, making the site an obligatory stop for food-focused travelers passing through the Kinki/Tokai corridor.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

Matsuzaka Castle is a pure stone wall experience — there are no buildings, only the empty stone wall compounds on the hillside. This is an acquired taste in castle visiting, but if you appreciate fine masonry, these walls are genuinely worth seeing. The free admission and pleasant hilltop park setting make the stop easy to justify. Combine with a Matsusaka beef lunch in town.

Castle Type

hirayamajiro

Hill-top flatland castle — built on Matsugashima Hill in the flat coastal Ise Plain, with the elevated position providing visibility and enhanced defensive height

Layout Type

renkaku

Compound style — multiple compounds on the hillside arranged to take advantage of the natural contours

Main Tower (Tenshu)

Stone wall ruins only — the original main tower collapsed in a storm in 1644, only 57 years after construction. No tower has ever been rebuilt. The impressive stone walls of the inner and outer compounds survive in excellent condition.

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

kirikomi_hagi — Fitted stone masonry — carefully cut stones fitted together without mortar, characteristic of high-quality late Sengoku construction; the stonework is among the finest surviving examples of Momoyama-era castle building

Matsuzaka Castle's stone walls are its defining feature. The kirikomi-hagi stonework of the inner compound walls rises impressively up the hillside, with precisely fitted stones that have survived four centuries in excellent condition. The contrast between the fine stonework and the absence of any buildings above it creates a powerful and melancholy impression.

Key Defensive Features

Elevated Hill Position

The castle's position atop Matsugashima Hill gave defenders a commanding view of the surrounding Ise Plain and the approaches from all directions. The height advantage enhanced the effectiveness of archery and firearms from the walls.

Kirikomi-hagi Stone Walls

The fitted stone walls of the inner compound are exceptionally well-constructed and well-preserved. The quality of the stonework reflects Gamo Ujisato's attention to detail and the considerable resources committed to the castle's construction.

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
Outer Enclosure (Kakuuchi) and Town Approaches
· Third compound outer perimeter· Castle town approaches· Hillside ascending path
Second Compound (Ninomaru)
· Stone walls· Secondary defensive line· Administrative buildings (no longer extant)
Main Compound (Honmaru) — Summit
· Finest kirikomi-hagi stone walls· Tower foundation (tower collapsed 1644)· Panoramic views of Ise Plain

Historical Context — Matsuzaka Castle

Matsuzaka Castle's hillside position channeled attackers to the controlled approach paths up the slope — the elevated stone walls above would have subjected any ascending assault force to fire from above. The quality of the fortifications suggests Gamo Ujisato designed a castle capable of withstanding significant assault, even if its operational life was cut short by peacetime and the tower's early collapse.

The Story of Matsuzaka Castle

Originally built 1588 by Gamo Ujisato
Current form 1588 by Gamo Ujisato
    1588

    Gamo Ujisato, one of Nobunaga's finest generals, builds Matsuzaka Castle on Matsugashima Hill as the administrative center for Ise Province. Ujisato simultaneously lays out the castle town with care — the foundation of modern Matsusaka city.

    1590

    Gamo Ujisato is transferred by Toyotomi Hideyoshi to Aizu domain in northern Honshu. The Matsuzaka domain passes through several lords before the Tokugawa period.

    1644

    The main tower collapses in a violent storm — just 56 years after construction. Under the Tokugawa peace, there is no military justification to rebuild it, and the ruins are left as they stand.

    1868

    Domain abolition ends Matsuzaka Castle's administrative function. The stone walls and earthworks remain as the castle's enduring legacy.

Did You Know?

  • Matsuzaka is more famous for Matsusaka beef (Matsusaka-gyu) than for its castle — the Wagyu cattle raised in the Matsusaka area have produced what many Japanese connoisseurs consider the finest beef in Japan. The castle town's restaurants serving Matsusaka beef draw far more visitors than the castle ruins themselves.
  • Gamo Ujisato, who built Matsuzaka Castle, was a notable Christian daimyo (baptized as 'Leo') who brought Jesuit missionaries into his domains. His construction work in both Matsusaka and Aizu reflects a sophisticated aesthetic that some scholars attribute partly to Christian European influences on castle design during the late 16th century.
  • The main tower's collapse in 1644 makes Matsuzaka unusual — most castle towers were deliberately demolished by the Meiji government or destroyed by fire or war. Matsuzaka's tower simply fell down in a storm, and no one deemed it worth rebuilding during the peaceful Edo period.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

D 42/100
  • Accessibility 11 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 6 /20
  • Historical Value 13 /20
  • Visual Impact 8 /20
  • Facilities 4 /20

Defense Score

D 52/100
  • Natural Position 11 /20
  • Wall Complexity 11 /20
  • Layout Strategy 10 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 10 /20
  • Siege Resistance 10 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Spring cherry blossoms make the castle park particularly attractive. Year-round for the stone walls.

Time Needed

45 minutes (ruins) + 1 hour (Matsusaka beef lunch) = 2 hours total

Insider Tip

After the ruins, walk down into the city center to one of the Matsusaka beef restaurants — the lunch sets at several establishments are more affordable than the dinner menus and still showcase the quality that makes Matsusaka beef famous. The castle town merchant district (Motocho area) also preserves several Edo-period merchant houses worth a brief walk.

Getting There

Nearest station: Matsusaka Station (JR Kisei Main Line / Kintetsu Yamada Line)
Walk from station: 15 minutes
Parking: Free parking available at the castle park.
Accessible with a JR Pass

Admission

Free Entry

The ruins and Matsuzaka Castle Park are completely free. The adjacent Matsuzaka City Museum (Matsusaka-jo Seki Kinensho) is free. There is no charge for any part of the site.

Opening Hours

Open 00:00 – 23:59

Castle park accessible at all times. The castle ruins are an outdoor site with no operational hours.

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 Matsuzaka Castle?

The nearest station is Matsusaka Station (JR Kisei Main Line / Kintetsu Yamada Line). It is approximately a 15-minute walk from the station. Parking: Free parking available at the castle park. Accessible with a JR Pass.

How much does Matsuzaka Castle cost to enter?

Matsuzaka Castle is free to enter. The ruins and Matsuzaka Castle Park are completely free. The adjacent Matsuzaka City Museum (Matsusaka-jo Seki Kinensho) is free. There is no charge for any part of the site.

Is Matsuzaka Castle worth visiting?

Matsuzaka Castle is best appreciated by visitors who understand that walls without buildings can be more eloquent than concrete tower reconstructions. The kirikomi-hagi stonework here is genuinely excellent, the hilltop park is attractive, and the free admission removes any barrier to stopping. The real incentive for most visitors is the combination: fine castle ruins + Matsusaka beef lunch = a very satisfying few hours in Mie Prefecture.

What are the opening hours of Matsuzaka Castle?

Matsuzaka Castle is open 00:00 – 23:59 . Castle park accessible at all times. The castle ruins are an outdoor site with no operational hours.

How long should I spend at Matsuzaka Castle?

Plan on spending 45 minutes (ruins) + 1 hour (Matsusaka beef lunch) = 2 hours total at Matsuzaka Castle. After the ruins, walk down into the city center to one of the Matsusaka beef restaurants — the lunch sets at several establishments are more affordable than the dinner menus and still showcase the quality that makes Matsusaka beef famous. The castle town merchant district (Motocho area) also preserves several Edo-period merchant houses worth a brief walk.