Himeji-jo is praised as Japan's most beautiful medieval castle. The history of Himeji start in 1333, when Akamatsu Norimura built a fort at the current location. After Tokugawa Ieyasu's decisive victory at Segigahara (1600), his son-in-law Ikeda Terumasa started the digging of three moats and the erection of the present castle, completed in 1609. The Honda family, who inherited the castle, added some building in 1618. The castle subsequently passed to the Matsudaira, Sakakibara and eventually Sakai families, until its nationalization when the end of the feudal system came in 1868.
The main tower is 46m high and covers an area of 2400m2. The inner grounds of the castle stretch on 23 hectares, while the outer grounds are 10 times as large.
Himeji castle was added the the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1992.