Karatsu Castle

唐津城 · Karatsu-jo

D Defense 55/100
D Defense 45/100

Kyushu's 'floating castle' — a white tower on a sea-facing hill above Japan's finest pine beach, with one of Japan's greatest autumn festivals.

#185 — Continued 100 Castles

Quick Facts

Quick Facts

Admission
¥500

Child: ¥250

Hours
09:00 – 17:00

Last entry 16:30

Nearest Station
Karatsu Station (Matsuura Railway / JR Chikuhi Line)
Walk from Station
15 min

Bus also available

Time Needed
1.5-2 hours (castle + coastal walk)

Adult 500 yen, child 250 yen. The castle grounds and coastal path below the castle are free; fee applies to the main tower museum interior.

Why Visit Karatsu Castle?

Karatsu Castle offers the complete package: a beautiful coastal setting, a photogenic white tower floating above the bay, excellent views, the famous Niji no Matsubara pine beach walk, and the extraordinary Karatsu Kunchi festival in November. It is one of the most visually satisfying continued 100 Famous Castles in Kyushu and a natural stop between Fukuoka and Nagasaki.

Highlights — What to Look For

1

The 'Floating Castle' on the Sea — One of Kyushu's Most Beautiful

Karatsu Castle sits on Manzuru-yama, a low rocky hill projecting into the Karatsu Bay, with the sea visible on three sides. When viewed from the famous Niji no Matsubara pine beach to the east, the white castle tower appears to float above the water against a backdrop of pine forests and sea — one of the most classically beautiful castle silhouettes in Kyushu. The view from the beach is the iconic Karatsu postcard image.

2

Niji no Matsubara — Japan's Finest Pine Beach

Directly east of Karatsu Castle, the Niji no Matsubara (Rainbow Pine Forest) stretches for 4.5 km — a narrow strip of beach backed by one of Japan's three greatest pine forests, planted over 400 years ago as a windbreak for Karatsu's rice fields. Walking the pine-lined beach with the castle visible above the bay is among the most scenic coastal walks in Kyushu.

3

Karatsu Kunchi — One of Japan's Greatest Festivals

Karatsu's annual Kunchi festival (early November) features a procession of enormous lacquered floats (hikiyama) — giant, brilliantly colored sculptures of samurai helmets, sea bream, and legendary creatures, pulled through the streets by hundreds of participants. It is designated an Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property and is one of the most visually spectacular festivals in Japan.

How This Castle Was Built to Fight

Visitor Tip

Karatsu Castle is one of the most visually accessible and tourist-friendly castles in Kyushu. The tower is a comfortable modern reconstruction with a museum inside covering Karatsu history well, and the views from the top floor over Karatsu Bay and Niji no Matsubara pine beach are excellent. Even if you skip the interior, the coastal walk around the base of the castle hill (passing original stone walls) is pleasant and free. Combine with a walk along Niji no Matsubara beach for the full Karatsu experience.

Castle Type

hirayamajiro

Hill-top flatland castle — built on Manzuru-yama, a rocky coastal hill projecting into Karatsu Bay on the Genkai Sea coast of Saga Prefecture, with ocean water on three sides and the Karatsu castle town on the landward side

Layout Type

renkaku

Compound style — compounds arranged on the coastal hill with the main tower on the highest point and secondary compounds on the hill's seaward slopes

Main Tower (Tenshu)

Concrete reconstruction (1966) — the current five-story white tower is a modern reconstruction housing a regional history museum. No original tower survived; the reconstruction was built to boost local tourism. Despite being modern, the white tower's coastal setting is visually impressive and the museum inside is informative about Karatsu domain history and the Korean invasion connection.

26m tall 5 floors above ground , 1 below

Stone Walls (Ishigaki)

nozurazumi — Natural stone stacking — stone walls (ishigaki) partially surviving on the coastal hill, with restored sections around the main compound and coastal approach. Original stone walls visible at the castle base and along the seaward slope.

Surviving and restored stone walls enclose the main castle compound on Manzuru-yama. Original stone wall sections are visible on the seaward slopes and the coastal approach path at the base of the hill, representing the early Edo-period construction under Terasawa Hirotaka.

Moats

Karatsu Bay on three sides of the coastal hill served as a natural seawater moat. A conventional moat and earthwork ditch separated the castle compound from the castle town on the landward side.

Key Defensive Features

Karatsu Bay as a Three-Sided Sea Moat

The rocky hill's projection into Karatsu Bay puts open seawater on three sides — east, north, and west. Any attack from these directions required a naval approach across open water under fire from the castle walls. The Terasawa clan's coastal experience (they had managed the Hizen-Nagoya invasion staging logistics) made them well-suited to understand and maximize this maritime defensive advantage.

White Tower Coastal Prominence

The castle's white tower on the coastal hill served as both a military observation post and a navigation landmark for ships entering Karatsu Bay. The prominent coastal position gave the garrison complete awareness of all maritime activity in the bay and the Genkai Sea approaches.

Landward Gate Complex

The only land approach to the castle required passing through the castle town from the south, entering through a gate complex that controlled the single narrow access route to the hilltop compound. This funnel approach compressed any land-based attack to a single-file advance through controlled gates.

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
Karatsu Bay — Three-Sided Sea Approach
· Open Karatsu Bay seawater on three sides· Genkai Sea to the north· Niji no Matsubara pine coast to the east
Coastal Stone Walls and Base
· Original stone walls on seaward slopes· Coastal path (now public walkway)· Rocky hill base as natural barrier
Town-Side Approach and Ninomaru
· Castle town and gate complex· Second compound walls· Moat ditch separating town from castle
Honmaru — Manzuru-yama Summit
· Five-story castle tower (reconstructed)· Panoramic views over bay and pine beach· Final defensive compound

Historical Context — Karatsu Castle

Attacking Karatsu Castle meant either approaching by sea across open Karatsu Bay water under fire from the coastal walls or attacking along the single land corridor through the castle town from the south, fighting through the gate complex into the hilltop compound with the bay on both flanks. Neither approach was practical against a determined defender — the castle's combined coastal and hilltop position made it one of the more naturally defensible sites on the Genkai Sea coast.

The Story of Karatsu Castle

Originally built 1602 by Terasawa Hirotaka
Current form 1608 by Terasawa Hirotaka
    1602

    Terasawa Hirotaka, who served Toyotomi Hideyoshi as the administrator of the Hizen-Nagoya invasion staging area, is assigned to Karatsu domain following the post-Sekigahara reorganization. He immediately begins construction of Karatsu Castle on Manzuru-yama using his expertise in coastal logistics and fortification developed at Hizen-Nagoya.

    1608

    Karatsu Castle reaches its completed form, with stone walls, gate complexes, and the main tower on Manzuru-yama. The surrounding Niji no Matsubara pine forest, planted as a domain windbreak during the same period, creates the famous scenic backdrop that has made Karatsu one of the most photographed coastal castles in Kyushu.

    1637

    The Shimabara Rebellion — the largest uprising in Edo-period Japan — creates political crisis in Kyushu. Terasawa Katataka (Hirotaka's son) is criticized for his harsh governance of Christians in his domain. Following the rebellion's brutal suppression, his domain is reduced as punishment.

    1647

    The Terasawa line ends without an heir. The domain is briefly managed directly by the Tokugawa government before being assigned to a succession of new lords, including the Okabe and Matsudaira families, who maintain the castle through the Edo period.

    1871

    Following the Meiji Restoration, Karatsu domain is abolished and the castle tower is demolished along with most castle buildings. The stone walls and hill remain as public land.

    1966

    A five-story concrete castle tower is constructed on Manzuru-yama by the city of Karatsu as a regional museum and tourism attraction. While not historically authentic, the white tower's coastal setting restores Karatsu's iconic castle silhouette.

    2017

    Karatsu Castle is designated #185 on the 続日本100名城 list, recognizing the castle's scenic coastal setting, its historical connection to the Hizen-Nagoya invasion era, and its role in the cultural life of Karatsu city through the annual Kunchi festival.

Did You Know?

  • The name 'Manzuru-yama' (万鶴山, '10,000-crane mountain') allegedly comes from the legend that 10,000 cranes gathered on the hill on the day construction began — a propitious omen for the new castle.
  • The Karatsu Kunchi festival floats (hikiyama) are kept year-round in the Hikiyama Exhibition Hall near the castle and can be viewed up close even outside festival season — including a famous red sea bream float, a samurai helmet, and a spectacular dragon. The floats are over 150 years old.
  • Terasawa Hirotaka, who built Karatsu Castle, had previously managed the enormous logistics operation at Hizen-Nagoya Castle for Toyotomi Hideyoshi's Korean invasions — making him uniquely experienced in coastal military infrastructure at the time he built Karatsu.
  • Karatsu is famous for Karatsu-yaki pottery — a Sengoku-period ceramic tradition brought to Kyushu by Korean potters following the invasions of Korea. The same historical events that Hizen-Nagoya Castle represents directly led to the ceramic tradition for which Karatsu is now famous.

Score Breakdown

Tourism Score

D 55/100
  • Accessibility 11 /20
  • Foreign-Friendly 10 /20
  • Historical Value 13 /20
  • Visual Impact 13 /20
  • Facilities 8 /20

Defense Score

D 45/100
  • Natural Position 14 /20
  • Wall Complexity 9 /20
  • Layout Strategy 10 /20
  • Approach Difficulty 9 /20
  • Siege Resistance 3 /20

Planning Your Visit

Best Time to Visit

Early November for the Karatsu Kunchi festival (book accommodation far in advance). Spring (cherry blossoms with the sea backdrop) and autumn (clear sky views) are excellent otherwise. Summer weekends are crowded.

Time Needed

1.5-2 hours (castle + coastal walk)

Insider Tip

For the classic 'floating castle' photograph, walk east along Niji no Matsubara beach and look back toward the castle over the bay. The view is best in morning light when the white tower catches the low eastern sun. The coastal walk from the beach to the castle base (passing the original stone walls) adds a pleasant 20 minutes to the visit.

Getting There

Nearest station: Karatsu Station (Matsuura Railway / JR Chikuhi Line)
Walk from station: 15 minutes
Bus: Regular bus service from Fukuoka (Hakata Station) to Karatsu takes about 1.5 hours. The castle is a 15-minute walk from Karatsu Station. An escalator ascends from the castle base to the tower entrance.
Parking: Paid parking near the castle. 200-300 yen/hour depending on the lot.
Accessible with a JR Pass

Admission

Adult ¥500
Child ¥250

Adult 500 yen, child 250 yen. The castle grounds and coastal path below the castle are free; fee applies to the main tower museum interior.

Opening Hours

Open 09:00 – 17:00
Last entry 16:30

Closed on certain Mondays and during the Karatsu Kunchi festival period (early November). Open year-round otherwise. The coastal path below is always accessible.

Facilities

  • English guides
  • Audio guide
  • Wheelchair access
  • Restrooms
  • Gift shop
  • Food nearby

Audio guide languages: Japanese, English

Nearby Castles

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get to Karatsu Castle?

The nearest station is Karatsu Station (Matsuura Railway / JR Chikuhi Line). It is approximately a 15-minute walk from the station. Regular bus service from Fukuoka (Hakata Station) to Karatsu takes about 1.5 hours. The castle is a 15-minute walk from Karatsu Station. An escalator ascends from the castle base to the tower entrance. Parking: Paid parking near the castle. 200-300 yen/hour depending on the lot. Accessible with a JR Pass.

How much does Karatsu Castle cost to enter?

Adult admission is ¥500. Children: ¥250. Adult 500 yen, child 250 yen. The castle grounds and coastal path below the castle are free; fee applies to the main tower museum interior.

Is Karatsu Castle worth visiting?

Karatsu Castle offers the complete package: a beautiful coastal setting, a photogenic white tower floating above the bay, excellent views, the famous Niji no Matsubara pine beach walk, and the extraordinary Karatsu Kunchi festival in November. It is one of the most visually satisfying continued 100 Famous Castles in Kyushu and a natural stop between Fukuoka and Nagasaki.

What are the opening hours of Karatsu Castle?

Karatsu Castle is open 09:00 – 17:00 (last entry 16:30). Closed on certain Mondays and during the Karatsu Kunchi festival period (early November). Open year-round otherwise. The coastal path below is always accessible.

How long should I spend at Karatsu Castle?

Plan on spending 1.5-2 hours (castle + coastal walk) at Karatsu Castle. For the classic 'floating castle' photograph, walk east along Niji no Matsubara beach and look back toward the castle over the bay. The view is best in morning light when the white tower catches the low eastern sun. The coastal walk from the beach to the castle base (passing the original stone walls) adds a pleasant 20 minutes to the visit.