Hirosaki Castle with cherry blossoms, Hirosaki, Japan
© Glenn Waters/Getty Image
Where power resides. Castle Day Japan
Picture northern Japan in the early 1600s. Castles stood at the crossroads of politics, trade and governance. Across generations, they came to reflect not only moments of tension, but also endurance, adaptation and everyday life. Castle Day, celebrated on April 6, was created to highlight that layered past. The day uses a simple phonetic link—shi (4) and ro (6)—to form Shiro-no-Hi, because 'shiro' means castle in Japanese. It's a reminder that castles had serious jobs long before they had cinematic appeal.
Today's image features Hirosaki Castle, completed in 1611 under the Tsugaru clan, an influential Japanese samurai family. Fires, repairs and rebuilding reshaped it, but the castle remained in use until the feudal system ended in the 19th century. Rather than a relic, it endures as evidence of local rule and Edo-period design—a past that remained present as aesthetics moved toward minimalism.
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