Yoshida Castle

吉田城 · Yoshida-jo

F Defense 38/100
D Defense 42/100

Ieyasu's riverside checkpoint castle — the fortress that guarded the Tokaido's most important river crossing, now a pleasant park above the Toyokawa.

#151 — Continued 100 Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
Free Free
Hours
09:00 – 17:00

Last entry 16:30

Nearest Station
Toyohashi Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Shinkansen Kodama)
Walk from Station
20 min

Bus also available

Time Needed
45 minutes to 1 hour

Free access to the castle park and surviving stone walls. The reconstructed turret (tamon-yagura) interior is also free to enter.

Why Visit Yoshida Castle?

Yoshida Castle is a low-key stop for Sengoku history enthusiasts traveling the Tokaido corridor. The riverside setting is genuinely attractive, the surviving stone walls impressive, and the castle's connection to the Mikawa domain's formative years (Ieyasu, Sakai Tadatsugu, Nagashino) gives it historical depth beyond its modest physical remains. Conveniently accessed from Toyohashi Station on the Shinkansen Kodama service.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

The Castle Nobunaga Never Finished — Ieyasu Did

Yoshida Castle changed hands multiple times during the Sengoku period before Tokugawa Ieyasu took control of the Mikawa region and installed his retainer Sakai Tadatsugu as commander. The castle guarded the critical Tokaido highway crossing of the Toyokawa River — whoever held Yoshida controlled east-west movement in central Honshu.

2

River Fortress on the Toyokawa

Yoshida Castle sits directly above the Toyokawa River, with the river forming a natural moat on one side. The original castle platform still juts over the modern riverbank in Toyobashi Park — one of the more dramatic surviving castle-location relationships in the Tokai region.

3

An Honest Reconstruction

The reconstructed tamon-yagura (long turret) at the site is a smaller-scale structure built on original stone foundations — it represents what the inner compound's connecting turret looked like, not the main tower (which was never reconstructed). This honest partial reconstruction, with the surviving original ishigaki stone walls, gives a realistic sense of the castle's modest but functional character.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

Yoshida Castle today is primarily enjoyed as a pleasant riverside park with historical content rather than a dramatic ruin experience. The reconstructed tamon-yagura gives a photogenic focal point, and the surviving stone walls along the riverside walk are genuinely impressive. The park setting — with the Toyokawa flowing past below — makes the castle's strategic logic immediately apparent.

Castle Type

hirajiro

Flatland castle (built on flat terrain, relying on waterways and earthworks for defense)

Layout Type

rinkaku

Ring-style layout — compounds arranged around a central core

Main Tower (Tenshu)

Partial reconstruction — tamon-yagura (long turret) reconstructed in 1954; original tenshu never rebuilt. Original stone walls (ishigaki) survive.

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

nozurazumi — Natural stone stacking — original ishigaki stone walls survive on the Toyokawa riverside face

The surviving stone walls along the Toyokawa riverside are original construction, presenting a strong riverside face above the river. The reconstructed tamon-yagura sits on original stone foundations within the Honmaru area.

Moats

The Toyokawa River forms the eastern natural water defense. Original dry moat ditches enclosed the other sides of the castle compound — partially visible in the park landscape.

Key Defensive Features

Toyokawa River Water Defense

The river provided an immediate natural barrier on the eastern and southern faces, eliminating the need for constructed water moats on those sides and concentrating defensive investment on the landward approaches.

River Crossing Control

The castle's position directly above the primary Tokaido river crossing meant that no army could cross the Toyokawa at this point without engaging the castle — a strategic chokepoint function rather than a purely defensive one.

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
Toyokawa River (Natural Eastern Defense)
· Toyokawa River — natural water barrier· Surviving original stone walls on riverside face· River crossing below castle platform
Honmaru Core Compound
· Reconstructed tamon-yagura on original foundations· Ishigaki stone walls (original, surviving)· Former tenshu platform area (not rebuilt)
Outer Compounds (Ninomaru, Sannomaru)
· Now largely Toyobashi Park· Earthwork traces visible in park landscape· Former moat lines detectable in park layout

Historical Context — Yoshida Castle

Yoshida Castle was primarily a strategic checkpoint rather than an impregnable fortress. Its strength lay in controlling the Toyokawa crossing on the Tokaido — forcing any army moving east-west to either assault the castle or find a slower alternative route. A determined attacker with significant force could likely have taken it; its value was in denying the crossing, not in surviving extended siege.

The Story of Yoshida Castle

Originally built 1505 by Makino Kojiro
Current form 1565 by Sakai Tadatsugu (under Tokugawa Ieyasu)
    1505

    Makino Kojiro constructs an initial fortification at the Toyokawa crossing, establishing the strategic position that Yoshida Castle will occupy for the next century of Sengoku warfare.

    1540

    The castle comes under Imagawa clan influence as they extend their control westward through Mikawa Province. The Yoshida crossing becomes a key supply point for Imagawa campaigns toward Owari.

    1565

    Tokugawa Ieyasu, having broken free of Imagawa control after Okehazama (1560), consolidates his hold on Mikawa Province. He installs his general Sakai Tadatsugu as commander of Yoshida and significantly expands the castle. Under Sakai, Yoshida becomes one of the key fortresses of the Tokugawa domain.

    1590

    When Tokugawa Ieyasu is relocated from Mikawa to the Kanto region by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Yoshida comes under new Toyotomi-aligned lordship. The castle continues to function as a key post-town castle on the Tokaido highway.

    1868

    The Meiji Restoration ends the castle's military function. The structures are gradually demolished. The site becomes a public park. The stone walls and earthworks survive.

    1954

    A tamon-yagura (long corridor turret) is reconstructed on original stone foundations in the Honmaru area, providing a focal structure for the castle park. The reconstruction is based on historical records and drawings.

Seen This Castle Before?

TV

Tokugawa Ieyasu historical dramas

Yoshida Castle and Sakai Tadatsugu appear in historical dramas covering Ieyasu's Mikawa period — particularly the NHK Taiga drama 'Doubutsu Sentai' and dramas covering Ieyasu's consolidation of the Mikawa domain.

Did You Know?

  • The city of Toyohashi (literally 'Toyo Bridge') takes its name from the Toyokawa bridge crossing that Yoshida Castle was built to control — the castle's strategic function is literally encoded in the modern city's name.
  • Sakai Tadatsugu, who commanded Yoshida Castle under Ieyasu, is famous for the Battle of Nagashino (1575) where he led a daring night raid on the Takeda supply depot, contributing to the Oda-Tokugawa victory. The commander of Yoshida Castle played a key role in the battle that effectively ended Takeda military power.
  • The reconstructed tamon-yagura at Yoshida is one of the earliest post-war castle reconstructions in Japan, built in 1954 when enthusiasm for historical restoration was high but strict historical accuracy standards had not yet been widely adopted.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

F 38/100
  • Accessibility 10 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 5 /20
  • Historical Value 10 /20
  • Visual Impact 8 /20
  • Facilities 5 /20

Defense Score

D 42/100
  • Natural Position 10 /20
  • Wall Complexity 9 /20
  • Layout Strategy 8 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 8 /20
  • Siege Resistance 7 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Spring for park cherry blossoms (late March to early April) — the riverside parkland setting is particularly attractive in bloom. Pleasant in any season; avoid midsummer heat.

Time Needed

45 minutes to 1 hour

Insider Tip

Walk the stone wall section along the Toyokawa River rather than just photographing the reconstructed turret — the riverside ishigaki gives the most direct physical connection to the original castle. The turret interior has minimal exhibits but the view from the upper level over the river is worth the climb.

Getting There

Nearest station: Toyohashi Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Shinkansen Kodama)
Walk from station: 20 minutes
Bus: City bus from Toyohashi Station to 'Yoshida-jo Mae' stop.
Parking: Free parking available in the adjacent Toyobashi Park.
Accessible with a JR Pass

Admission

Free Entry

Free access to the castle park and surviving stone walls. The reconstructed turret (tamon-yagura) interior is also free to enter.

Opening Hours

Open 09:00 – 17:00
Last entry 16:30

The reconstructed turret building is closed on Mondays and over the New Year holiday. The outer park and stone walls are accessible at all times.

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 Yoshida Castle?

The nearest station is Toyohashi Station (JR Tokaido Main Line / Shinkansen Kodama). It is approximately a 20-minute walk from the station. City bus from Toyohashi Station to 'Yoshida-jo Mae' stop. Parking: Free parking available in the adjacent Toyobashi Park. Accessible with a JR Pass.

How much does Yoshida Castle cost to enter?

Yoshida Castle is free to enter. Free access to the castle park and surviving stone walls. The reconstructed turret (tamon-yagura) interior is also free to enter.

Is Yoshida Castle worth visiting?

Yoshida Castle is a low-key stop for Sengoku history enthusiasts traveling the Tokaido corridor. The riverside setting is genuinely attractive, the surviving stone walls impressive, and the castle's connection to the Mikawa domain's formative years (Ieyasu, Sakai Tadatsugu, Nagashino) gives it historical depth beyond its modest physical remains. Conveniently accessed from Toyohashi Station on the Shinkansen Kodama service.

What are the opening hours of Yoshida Castle?

Yoshida Castle is open 09:00 – 17:00 (last entry 16:30). The reconstructed turret building is closed on Mondays and over the New Year holiday. The outer park and stone walls are accessible at all times.

How long should I spend at Yoshida Castle?

Plan on spending 45 minutes to 1 hour at Yoshida Castle. Walk the stone wall section along the Toyokawa River rather than just photographing the reconstructed turret — the riverside ishigaki gives the most direct physical connection to the original castle. The turret interior has minimal exhibits but the view from the upper level over the river is worth the climb.