Yanagawa Castle

柳川城 · Yanagawa-jo

D Defense 52/100
D Defense 45/100

Where the moats became the tourist attraction — Yanagawa's 470 km of castle canals now carry donkobune sightseeing boats through the same water-fortress that once protected the Tachibana clan.

#101 — Continued 100 Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
Free Free
Hours
00:00 – 23:59
Nearest Station
Nishitetsu-Yanagawa Station (Nishitetsu Tenjin Omuta Line from Fukuoka/Tenjin)
Walk from Station
10 min

Bus also available

Time Needed
3–4 hours (boat tour + Ohana villa + lunch)

Castle ruins are free. The famous donkobune canal boat tours are separate (approximately ¥1,500–¥1,800 per person and run by multiple operators).

Why Visit Yanagawa Castle?

Yanagawa is one of the most genuinely distinctive castle-town experiences in Japan. The canal boat tour through willow-lined moats is unlike any castle experience elsewhere — slow, quiet, and atmospheric. The castle ruins themselves are modest (a villa occupies the main compound), but the entire city IS the castle's defensive system, and experiencing it by boat makes this viscerally clear. Add the Kitahara Hakushu literary connection, the famous seiro-mushi eel dish, and the Ohana villa garden, and Yanagawa offers a full half-day or day itinerary.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

The Moat System That Became the Attraction

Yanagawa Castle's most famous feature is no longer the castle itself but its water defense system — a vast network of moats and canals that once formed one of the most extensive water-castle complexes in western Japan. Today those same moats are navigated by flat-bottomed donkobune boats, carrying tourists through the willow-lined waterways that once protected the Tachibana clan. The defensive moats became the city's defining tourist experience.

2

The Tachibana Clan's Water Fortress

Yanagawa was the domain castle of the Tachibana clan throughout the Edo period — a family famous for producing Tachibana Muneshige, one of the Seven Spears of Shizugatake and one of the most celebrated generals of the Sengoku era. The castle's multiple water moats, fed by the lowland rivers and irrigation channels of the Chikugo River delta, made it one of the most formidable water fortresses in Kyushu.

3

Poet Kitahara Hakushu's Hometown

Yanagawa is the birthplace of Kitahara Hakushu (1885–1942), one of the most celebrated poets of the Meiji and Taisho eras, whose romantic, symbolist poetry was shaped by the watery landscape of his castle-town childhood. His childhood home is preserved near the castle canals, and his poetry about Yanagawa's water and light is still closely associated with the city.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

The castle ruins are modest — the main draw is the canal boat experience. Take a donkobune boat tour from one of the operators near the station; the hour-long ride through the willow-lined moats is Yanagawa's defining experience. Afterward, visit Ohana (the Tachibana family villa on the former castle site) for the traditional garden and the castle history exhibit.

Castle Type

hirajiro

Flatland castle (built on a low elevated platform amid extensive water moats in the Chikugo River delta)

Layout Type

rinkaku

Ring-style — compounds arranged in concentric rings surrounded by water moats on all sides

Main Tower (Tenshu)

No tenshu survives — the main tower was demolished in the Meiji era. The castle site is now occupied by Ohana, the Tachibana family villa, and its garden.

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

nozurazumi — Natural stone stacking with earthen embankments — the water moats were the primary defensive element rather than stone walls

Yanagawa's defensive strength lay in its water moats rather than stone walls. The castle occupied a low platform surrounded by concentric water moats fed by the river delta, creating a water fortress that was extremely difficult to assault across open water.

Moats

Multiple concentric water moats fed by the Chikugo River delta network. The outer canal system stretched throughout the castle town and formed an interconnected water defense impossible to bypass without boats. The same canal system now carries tourist donkobune boats.

Key Defensive Features

Chikugo River Delta Water Network

The castle sat in the Chikugo River delta — a low-lying plain crossed by rivers, channels, and marshes. The castle's builders exploited this water-rich terrain to create a fortress surrounded on all sides by water, making direct assault extremely difficult for any land-based army.

Concentric Canal Moats

Multiple rings of water moats surrounded the castle compounds, each requiring crossing under fire. The width and depth of the moats made portable bridges or pontoons necessary for any assault — complex and time-consuming to deploy under defender fire.

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 Canal Network — City-Wide Water Defense
· River delta channels and outer canals· Canal boat access only — impassable for armies· Interconnected throughout castle town
Middle Moat Ring — Secondary Water Defense
· Second ring of water moats· Bridge control points· Defensive earthen banks
Inner Moat & Main Compound (Honmaru)
· Innermost water moat· Main tower site (now Ohana villa)· Tachibana clan residential compound

Historical Context — Yanagawa Castle

Assaulting Yanagawa Castle required crossing multiple rings of water moats in a lowland river delta — a formidable challenge for any Sengoku army without a significant naval element. The water network was not just the moats but the entire landscape: the Chikugo River delta made the castle town itself a water fortress. The approach from any direction meant navigating channels and marshes while under fire from defenders on elevated embankments.

The Story of Yanagawa Castle

Originally built 1558 by Kamachi clan (original fort); developed by Tachibana Muneshige from 1587
Current form 1620 by Tachibana Tadashige
    1558

    The Kamachi clan constructs a fort on the low platform amid the Chikugo River delta — exploiting the natural water network as the primary defense.

    1587

    Tachibana Muneshige, one of the greatest generals of the Sengoku era and a veteran of Shizugatake, receives Yanagawa as his domain from Toyotomi Hideyoshi. He expands the water fortress to its full extent.

    1600

    After the Battle of Sekigahara, Tachibana Muneshige is dispossessed — he had backed the Western forces. Yanagawa passes briefly to Tanaka Yoshimasa.

    1620

    The Tachibana clan is reinstated at Yanagawa by the Tokugawa shogunate (a rare reversal) — a testament to Muneshige's exceptional reputation. The clan expands the castle to its Edo-period mature form.

    1872

    The Meiji government's castle abolition policy sees Yanagawa's towers demolished. The Tachibana family retains their villa (Ohana) on the main compound site.

    1930

    Kitahara Hakushu, Yanagawa's famous poet son born in 1885, dies — but his romantic poetry about the canal waterways and water-light of his hometown has already made Yanagawa's aesthetic identity inseparable from his verse.

Seen This Castle Before?

artwork

Various Meiji-era woodblock prints

Yanagawa's distinctive canal-and-willow landscape was a popular subject for woodblock print artists in the Meiji and Taisho periods, often depicted in combination with Kitahara Hakushu's poetry.

Did You Know?

  • The canal system that now carries tourist donkobune boats is the same water network that formed Yanagawa Castle's primary defense — the tourists are literally floating through a 16th-century military moat system.
  • Tachibana Muneshige is one of the very few daimyo who lost his domain after Sekigahara (backing the losing Western forces) and then had it fully restored by the Tokugawa shogunate — a tribute to his legendary military reputation.
  • Yanagawa's 470 km of canals make it one of the most extensive castle moat networks to have survived in any form in Japan — most castle water systems were filled in during modernization.
  • The eel (unagi) dish 'seiro-mushi' (steamed over rice in a wooden box) is Yanagawa's famous local food, eaten after canal boat tours. The dish became associated with Yanagawa in the Edo period and remains the city's culinary identity.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

D 52/100
  • Accessibility 14 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 9 /20
  • Historical Value 10 /20
  • Visual Impact 11 /20
  • Facilities 8 /20

Defense Score

D 45/100
  • Natural Position 10 /20
  • Wall Complexity 9 /20
  • Layout Strategy 11 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 8 /20
  • Siege Resistance 7 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Spring (March–April) for cherry blossoms over the canals — Yanagawa's most iconic image. Autumn for foliage. The boat tours run year-round and are atmospheric in any season.

Time Needed

3–4 hours (boat tour + Ohana villa + lunch)

Insider Tip

The donkobune boat tours are run by multiple competing operators — prices are similar. The tour navigates under dozens of low stone bridges, and at each one the boatman pushes the canopy down flat while the boat slides underneath; watching this coordinated operation is half the entertainment. After the tour, order the seiro-mushi eel at one of the restaurants near the canal — this is Yanagawa's definitive food experience.

Getting There

Nearest station: Nishitetsu-Yanagawa Station (Nishitetsu Tenjin Omuta Line from Fukuoka/Tenjin)
Walk from station: 10 minutes
Bus: Multiple canal boat tour starting points are within walking distance of the station.
Parking: Paid parking lots near the castle site.

Admission

Free Entry

Castle ruins are free. The famous donkobune canal boat tours are separate (approximately ¥1,500–¥1,800 per person and run by multiple operators).

Opening Hours

Open 00:00 – 23:59

Ruins are open at all times. Canal boat tours operate daily, weather permitting; reduced schedule in winter.

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 Yanagawa Castle?

The nearest station is Nishitetsu-Yanagawa Station (Nishitetsu Tenjin Omuta Line from Fukuoka/Tenjin). It is approximately a 10-minute walk from the station. Multiple canal boat tour starting points are within walking distance of the station. Parking: Paid parking lots near the castle site.

How much does Yanagawa Castle cost to enter?

Yanagawa Castle is free to enter. Castle ruins are free. The famous donkobune canal boat tours are separate (approximately ¥1,500–¥1,800 per person and run by multiple operators).

Is Yanagawa Castle worth visiting?

Yanagawa is one of the most genuinely distinctive castle-town experiences in Japan. The canal boat tour through willow-lined moats is unlike any castle experience elsewhere — slow, quiet, and atmospheric. The castle ruins themselves are modest (a villa occupies the main compound), but the entire city IS the castle's defensive system, and experiencing it by boat makes this viscerally clear. Add the Kitahara Hakushu literary connection, the famous seiro-mushi eel dish, and the Ohana villa garden, and Yanagawa offers a full half-day or day itinerary.

What are the opening hours of Yanagawa Castle?

Yanagawa Castle is open 00:00 – 23:59 . Ruins are open at all times. Canal boat tours operate daily, weather permitting; reduced schedule in winter.

How long should I spend at Yanagawa Castle?

Plan on spending 3–4 hours (boat tour + Ohana villa + lunch) at Yanagawa Castle. The donkobune boat tours are run by multiple competing operators — prices are similar. The tour navigates under dozens of low stone bridges, and at each one the boatman pushes the canopy down flat while the boat slides underneath; watching this coordinated operation is half the entertainment. After the tour, order the seiro-mushi eel at one of the restaurants near the canal — this is Yanagawa's definitive food experience.