For life is not just about how we will live comfortably, or just about the good and the pleasurable things life may bring us, as we all hope it to be. But it's how we deal with rough roads, molehills and even the mountains each of us will have to trudge as we go through life; with a lot shimmying when edges are sharp, while others can go cherry-picking. But what is important is to be armed with great deal of faith and courage to face life's trial head on...
Sunday, January 13, 2008
A visit to Nagoya Castle
Nagoya Castle was constructed on the orders of the Ieyasu TOKUGAWA in order to secure an important position on Tkaido highway and to ward off attacks from the direction of Osaka. Construction was completed in 1612, and the castle is typical of those built on flatlands. Until the Meiji Restoration, Nagoya Castle flourished as the castle in which the Owari lineage of the Tokugawa family, the foremost of the family's three lineages, resided.
In May 1945, during the air raids on Nagoya in the Second World War, most of the buildings, including the main and small donjons, and the Hommaru Palace, were burned down. Fortunately however, three corner towers, three gates, and the most ofthe paintings on the sliding doors and walls in the Hommaru Palace survived the fire, and have been handed down as Important Cultural Assets.
The best known items associated with the Nagoya Castle are the golden dolphins, or kinshachi. It is said that the first dolphins (sachi) to adorn the main ridge of the castle roofs, added when the basic construction of the castle was completed, appeared in the Muromachi Era (1334-1400) as a symbol of the feudal lord's authority.
Although Nagoya's golden dolphins shared the fate of the donjon, being consumed by flames in the Second World War, they reappeared along with a rebuilt donjon, in 1959, to the delight of the people of Nagoya.
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