Takiyama Castle

滝山城 · Takiyama-jo

F Defense 35/100
C Defense 62/100

Tokyo's forgotten mountain fortress — the Hojo clan's earthwork masterpiece held off Takeda Shingen, and its ridge-cut moats remain dramatic 450 years after abandonment.

#20 — 100 Famous Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
Free Free
Hours
00:00 – 23:59
Nearest Station
Akikawa Station (JR Itsukaichi Line), then 25-minute walk; or Hachioji Station (JR Chuo Line / Yokohama Line), then bus
Walk from Station
25 min

Bus also available

Time Needed
2–3 hours including travel from Hachioji Station and full ruins trail

Castle ruins are a designated national historic site within Takiyama Park. Completely free to enter. No facilities at the ruins themselves — bring water.

Why Visit Takiyama Castle?

Takiyama Castle is for visitors who want the authentic Japanese mountain castle experience within an hour of central Tokyo — forest trails, ancient earthworks, moat cuts that are still meters deep, and the specific atmospheric quality of a site that has been abandoned for 430 years. Unlike reconstructed concrete castles, Takiyama is entirely original: the same earthwork ridges and moat cuts that stopped Takeda Shingen in 1569. The forest setting and river valley views are genuinely beautiful. This is not a tourist site with facilities — it is a historical site that rewards visitors who show up prepared and know what they're looking at.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

The Hojo Clan's Kanto Masterwork

Takiyama Castle was the primary stronghold of the Later Hojo clan (Go-Hojo) in the central Kanto region — built on a 160-meter hill above the confluence of the Tama River and Akigawa River, exploiting complex natural terrain to create one of the most sophisticated mountain castle layouts in eastern Japan. Before Hachioji Castle was built further west, Takiyama was the Hojo clan's key fortification controlling the approaches to their headquarters at Odawara.

2

Earthwork Engineering at Its Finest

Takiyama Castle is celebrated among Japanese castle scholars for the sophistication of its earthwork engineering — cut moats (horikiri), raised earthwork walls (dobei), secondary defensive ridges, and multiple island-like compound platforms created by cutting away the hillsides. The layout makes maximum use of the natural ridge and river-cliff terrain, creating a castle whose complexity in earthworks rivals the stone-walled sophistication of Sengoku giants like Osaka or Himeji.

3

Tokyo's Best Mountain Castle Ruins

Within reach of central Tokyo, Takiyama Castle offers one of the Kanto region's most rewarding castle ruin walks — through mature forest on clearly preserved earthwork remains, with views over the Tama River valley and (on clear days) Mt. Fuji to the southwest. The trail through the ruins takes about an hour, passing successive defensive tiers and the characteristic 'nagare-horikiri' (continuous moats flowing down the ridge) that are Hojo clan engineering signatures.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

Takiyama Castle is earthworks only — no walls, no towers, no buildings. What you see is shaped terrain: raised earth walls, cut moats, leveled platforms. The trail through the ruins is well-maintained and clearly marked, taking about 45–60 minutes to complete. The earthworks are actually impressive in physical scale once you're walking among them — the moat cuts in particular are deeper and more dramatic than photographs suggest. Wear walking shoes.

Castle Type

yamajiro

Mountain castle — built on a complex hill system at the confluence of the Tama and Akigawa Rivers, 160 meters above the surrounding valley floor

Layout Type

teikaku

Tier-style — successive defensive platforms and moat-cut ridges following the natural hilltop terrain, each tier reinforced by earthwork walls and cut moats (horikiri)

Main Tower (Tenshu)

No main tower — Takiyama Castle had no tenshu (main keep). Its defense relied on earthwork engineering and natural terrain rather than a central tower structure. The ruins consist entirely of earthworks, moat cuts, and natural terrain features.

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

dobei — Earthwork walls — packed earth raised walls and cut moats (horikiri) using the Hojo clan's signature earthwork engineering, supplemented by wooden palisades during active use

Takiyama Castle's earthwork engineering is its defining feature. The Hojo clan were masters of earthwork castle construction — their castles used cut-moat techniques (horikiri) to sever ridges connecting the castle to surrounding terrain, creating island-like defensive platforms. At Takiyama, this engineering reaches exceptional sophistication, with multiple moat cuts, raised earth walls, and carefully shaped terrain designed to control attacker movement.

Moats

Multiple horikiri (cut moats across ridges) and natural river-cliff moats define Takiyama's defensive system. The Tama River cliffs on the south side and Akigawa River cliffs on the north side served as natural moats supplemented by cut earthwork moats across the ridgelines connecting the hill to the surrounding terrain.

Key Defensive Features

River Confluence Cliff Position

The castle sits on a hill at the confluence of two rivers — the Tama River and Akigawa River — whose eroded valley cliffs provide near-vertical natural moats on the south and north sides. Attackers could approach only from the east along a connecting ridge, where the Hojo clan concentrated their earthwork defenses.

Horikiri (Ridge-Cut Moats)

The Hojo clan's signature defensive technique: cutting deep trenches across ridges to sever natural approach paths and create isolated defensive platforms. At Takiyama, multiple horikiri cross the eastern approach ridge, each one requiring attackers to descend and re-ascend under fire. The cuts are still deep and clear after 450 years.

Nagare-horikiri (Continuous Flowing Moats)

A refinement of the basic horikiri: instead of isolated moat cuts, a continuous moat system flows down the hillside, cutting off lateral movement between the ridge and the slope below. Any attacker trying to bypass a horikiri by descending the slope finds themselves in a channel that directs them into the next defensive position.

Multiple Compound System

Takiyama Castle's complex natural terrain allowed for multiple independent defensive compounds — west compound, east compound, main compound, outer compounds — that could operate semi-independently. An attacker who broke through one compound still faced intact defenses ahead, and the compound's garrison could fall back to the next position without exposing themselves to fire on open ground.

Tactical Defense Simulator

Yokoya-gakari (Flanking Fire)

Death from the Side

Yokoya BendYokoya BendOpposite Wall Entry Approach Path KILL ZONE 1 KILL ZONE 2
Attacking Force
1,000 / 1,000 troops
Phase 1: Approach

Attackers enter the corridor between walls. The path seems straightforward — but it isn't.

Castle Defense Layers
Eastern Approach Ridge
· Koga-kuruwa (outer compound)· First horikiri (ridge-cut moat) blocking ridge access· Wooden palisades along earthwork walls
East and West Compounds
· Higashi-kuruwa (east compound) and Nishi-kuruwa (west compound)· Secondary horikiri moats· Nagare-horikiri continuous moat system down slopes
Main Compound (Honmaru)
· Summit platform (main compound)· River cliff natural moats (Tama River south, Akigawa north)· Final earthwork walls

Historical Context — Takiyama Castle

Any assault on Takiyama had to approach along the eastern ridge — the only terrain connection, as the castle was surrounded by river cliffs on two sides and steep slopes on the others. The ridge approach was blocked by successive horikiri (cut moats) that forced attackers to stop, descend, and re-ascend under fire multiple times before reaching the main compound. The Hojo clan's earthwork engineering made this sequence of obstacles as effective as stone walls.

The Story of Takiyama Castle

Originally built 1521 by Oi Dokan (later expanded by Hojo clan)
    1521

    The initial fortification at Takiyama is established by the Oi clan. The river-confluence hill position is already recognized as strategically significant for controlling the central Kanto plain.

    1558

    The Later Hojo clan (Go-Hojo), expanding their control over the Kanto region from their Odawara headquarters, take control of Takiyama and massively expand and develop the castle using their signature earthwork engineering techniques. Hojo Ujiyori governs the castle as the clan's central Kanto stronghold.

    1569

    Takeda Shingen launches a major invasion of the Kanto region, advancing to within sight of Takiyama Castle. The castle holds — the Hojo earthwork defenses prove too formidable for Takeda's forces to assault directly. Shingen withdraws without taking the castle, demonstrating the effectiveness of the Hojo engineering investment.

    1587

    Hojo Ujiteru, Hachioji Castle's commander, gradually shifts the strategic center westward to the newly expanded Hachioji Castle. Takiyama is maintained but plays a reduced role as Hachioji becomes the Hojo's primary western Kanto fortress.

    1590

    Toyotomi Hideyoshi's subjugation of the Hojo clan results in the clan's defeat and the abandonment of all Hojo castles including Takiyama. The castle is not reoccupied under Tokugawa rule — it becomes ruins within a generation.

Did You Know?

  • Takeda Shingen's 1569 Kanto invasion, during which he advanced to the walls of Takiyama Castle and withdrew without taking it, is cited in Japanese military history as evidence of the Hojo clan's earthwork engineering excellence — Shingen was one of the greatest generals of the Sengoku period, and his inability to crack Takiyama through direct assault is the highest endorsement the castle's design received.
  • Takiyama Castle is within the modern boundaries of Hachioji City — a city in Tokyo Prefecture with a notable castle of its own (Hachioji Castle, destroyed in 1590). Tokyo therefore has two 100 Famous Castle designations: the better-known Edo Castle (now Imperial Palace) and Takiyama, plus the nearby ruins of Hachioji Castle.
  • The Hojo clan's earthwork castle engineering approach — eschewing stone walls in favor of sophisticated earthwork and moat engineering — was a deliberate strategic choice reflecting the geology and timber resources of the Kanto region, where good castle-building stone was scarce but skilled earthwork labor was abundant. The Hojo built their Kanto empire on earth, not stone.
  • Takiyama Park, which encompasses the castle ruins, is maintained by Hachioji City as both a historical site and a nature park. The forest that covers the castle earthworks is mature secondary woodland — oak, cedar, and bamboo — that has grown back since the castle was abandoned in 1590. Walking through it, the earthworks emerge from the undergrowth with the quality of archaeological discovery.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

F 35/100
  • Accessibility 7 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 4 /20
  • Historical Value 13 /20
  • Visual Impact 6 /20
  • Facilities 5 /20

Defense Score

C 62/100
  • Natural Position 16 /20
  • Wall Complexity 12 /20
  • Layout Strategy 14 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 12 /20
  • Siege Resistance 8 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Spring (cherry blossoms late March to early April) and autumn foliage (mid-November) are most scenic. Summer can be humid in the forest — wear light clothing and bring water. Clear winter days offer the best Fuji views.

Time Needed

2–3 hours including travel from Hachioji Station and full ruins trail

Insider Tip

Download a ruins map before visiting — the trail through the castle earthworks is well-marked but the numbered waypoints correspond to specific defensive features (horikiri moat cuts, compound platforms, etc.) that are easy to miss without a map. The Hachioji City website has a PDF ruins map in Japanese with feature numbers; even without Japanese reading ability, the numbered markers match the map layout. The deepest horikiri moat cut is at marker #7 — pause here to appreciate the scale of earthwork engineering that stopped a medieval army.

Getting There

Nearest station: Akikawa Station (JR Itsukaichi Line), then 25-minute walk; or Hachioji Station (JR Chuo Line / Yokohama Line), then bus
Walk from station: 25 minutes
Bus: Bus from Hachioji Station to Takiyama-jo Iriguchi stop. Alternatively, direct walk from Akikawa Station through residential streets to the park entrance.
Parking: Free parking available at the base of Takiyama (Takiyama Park entrance). Easy day trip from central Tokyo — approximately 1 hour from Shinjuku.
Accessible with a JR Pass

Admission

Free Entry

Castle ruins are a designated national historic site within Takiyama Park. Completely free to enter. No facilities at the ruins themselves — bring water.

Opening Hours

Open 00:00 – 23:59

Open year-round. The trail through the ruins takes 45–60 minutes to walk fully. Early morning visits offer the quietest experience.

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 Takiyama Castle?

The nearest station is Akikawa Station (JR Itsukaichi Line), then 25-minute walk; or Hachioji Station (JR Chuo Line / Yokohama Line), then bus. It is approximately a 25-minute walk from the station. Bus from Hachioji Station to Takiyama-jo Iriguchi stop. Alternatively, direct walk from Akikawa Station through residential streets to the park entrance. Parking: Free parking available at the base of Takiyama (Takiyama Park entrance). Easy day trip from central Tokyo — approximately 1 hour from Shinjuku. Accessible with a JR Pass.

How much does Takiyama Castle cost to enter?

Takiyama Castle is free to enter. Castle ruins are a designated national historic site within Takiyama Park. Completely free to enter. No facilities at the ruins themselves — bring water.

Is Takiyama Castle worth visiting?

Takiyama Castle is for visitors who want the authentic Japanese mountain castle experience within an hour of central Tokyo — forest trails, ancient earthworks, moat cuts that are still meters deep, and the specific atmospheric quality of a site that has been abandoned for 430 years. Unlike reconstructed concrete castles, Takiyama is entirely original: the same earthwork ridges and moat cuts that stopped Takeda Shingen in 1569. The forest setting and river valley views are genuinely beautiful. This is not a tourist site with facilities — it is a historical site that rewards visitors who show up prepared and know what they're looking at.

What are the opening hours of Takiyama Castle?

Takiyama Castle is open 00:00 – 23:59 . Open year-round. The trail through the ruins takes 45–60 minutes to walk fully. Early morning visits offer the quietest experience.

How long should I spend at Takiyama Castle?

Plan on spending 2–3 hours including travel from Hachioji Station and full ruins trail at Takiyama Castle. Download a ruins map before visiting — the trail through the castle earthworks is well-marked but the numbered waypoints correspond to specific defensive features (horikiri moat cuts, compound platforms, etc.) that are easy to miss without a map. The Hachioji City website has a PDF ruins map in Japanese with feature numbers; even without Japanese reading ability, the numbered markers match the map layout. The deepest horikiri moat cut is at marker #7 — pause here to appreciate the scale of earthwork engineering that stopped a medieval army.