Maebashi-jō is a Japanese castle located in Maebashi, central Gunma Prefecture, Japan. At the end of the Edo period, Maebashi Castle was home to a branch of the Matsudaira clan, daimyō of Maebashi Domain, although the castle was ruled by a large number of different clans over its history. The castle was also known as , after the former name of Maebashi.
The Uesugi were defeated by the Odawara Hōjō at the Battle of Kawagoe in 1546, around which time the Nagano clan defected to the Hōjō side. However, the Hojo were driven out by Uesugi Kenshin in 1560, who expanded Ishikura castle into one of his seven main strongholds in the Kantō area. The combined forces of the Hōjō and recaptured the caste in 1562, but were unable to hold it. Kenshin gave the castle to Kitajō Takahiro, but in 1567 Kitajō defected to the Hōjō clan, and later to the Takeda clan in 1579.
When the Takeda clan was extinguished by Oda Nobunaga in 1582, the castle was awarded to Takigawa Kazumasu, who resided here for only three months until Nobunaga's assassination. The Hōjō took the opportunity to recover the castle, but were themselves extinguished by Toyotomi Hideyoshi in 1590.
Maebashi was then given to a branch of the Matsudaira clan from Echizen Province, and Matsudaira Tomonori ruled from 1749 to 1767. However, erosion from the Tone River and flooding continued to plague the castle, and in 1767 Matsudaira Tomonori decided to relocate his seat from Maebashi to Kawagoe Castle, demoting Maebashi Domain to a detached territory of Kawagoe Domain.
Towards the Bakumatsu period, the growing prosperity and economic importance of Maebashi due to the sericulture led to the local townspeople petitioning their lord for his return to Maebashi Castle. The Tokugawa shogunate also looked to the Maebashi area as a possible site a refuge should Edo be attacked by the western powers, and supported the move. A new Maebashi Castle was completed in 1866, and the Matsudaira clan relocated back to Maebashi in 1867. The tenshu of the new castle was located slightly further inland than before, and the outer walls were reconstructed with zigzag lines to avoid dead angles. This was the last Japanese castle to be constructed in the Edo period.
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