(Redirected from Goryokaku)
Goryōkaku viewed from Goryōkaku Tower.

Map of Goryōkaku.
''for the 2001 film see
Goryōkaku (film)''
is a
star fort in the city of
Hakodate in southern
Hokkaidō,
Japan. It was the short-lived
Republic of Ezo's main fortress.
Built by the
Tokugawa shogunate in
1857-
1866, it was located in the center of the port of Hakodate, on the island of
Hokkaidō. Shaped like a five-pointed star, it allowed for greater numbers of gun emplacements on its walls than a traditional Japanese fortress, and reduced the number of "blind spots" where a cannon could not fire. In designing Goryokaku,
Takeda Ayasaburō, a
Rangaku scholar, adopted elements of the designs of the French architect
Vauban, who developed fortresses responding to the spread of the use of
cannon in
warfare.

The governmental hall, inside Goryōkaku.
Goryōkaku is famous as the site of the last battle of the
Boshin War. On
December 9 (
lunar calendar October 26),
1868, Ōtori Keisuke and
Hijikata Toshizo and their troops entered the fort. A week after Hijikata's death, on
June 27 (lunar calendar May 18),
1869, Goryokaku fell to the new
army of Japan, and much of it was reduced to ruin.
Today, Goryōkaku is a park. It has been declared a Special Historical Site and is home to the museum of the city of Hakodate. The grounds are a favorite spot for
hanami.
Another key fortress of the Republic of Ezo was
Benten Daiba, built on the site formerly occupied by a shrine to
Benten, the goddess of fortune. Much of the remnants of the famous
Shinsengumi fought their last battle and surrendered there.
External links
★
Japan Atlas: Goryokaku Fort
★
Sightseeing in Hakodate: Goryokaku Area
★
Goryokaku Tower