Edo Castle
Edo Castle (江戸城, Edo-jō) was a vast flatland fortress complex that served as the primary residence and administrative center of the Tokugawa shoguns, who held de facto control over Japan from 1603 to 1867.[1][2] Originally constructed in 1457 by the warlord Ōta Dōkan as a modest fortified residence in the village of Edo, it was dramatically expanded after Tokugawa Ieyasu seized control of the region in 1590 and commissioned major reconstructions starting around 1604, including massive stone walls and moats that underscored the shogunate's authority.[3][4][5] The castle's strategic design, with concentric baileys (honmaru, ni-no-maru, and san-no-maru), extensive waterways, and towering keeps—though the main donjon was lost to fire in 1657—made it the largest and most impregnable stronghold in feudal Japan, symbolizing the Tokugawa regime's consolidation of power following Ieyasu's victory at Sekigahara in 1600.[4][6] For over 260 years, it housed successive shoguns across 15 generations, facilitating the bakufu's governance amid policies like sankin-kōtai that centralized feudal lords in Edo, while its layout influenced the urban development of the burgeoning city around it.[7][2] Following the shogunate's collapse in the Boshin War of 1868–1869, Emperor Meiji repurposed the site as the Tokyo Imperial Palace, with most wooden structures destroyed by a deliberate fire in 1873 to prevent looting; surviving elements include stone foundations, moats, and guardhouses that attest to its engineering feats, such as quarried granite walls exceeding 10 meters in height.[7][8] Today, the palace grounds preserve remnants of Edo Castle's defensive infrastructure, offering insight into the Tokugawa era's political and architectural legacy amid Tokyo's modern skyline.[1]