is the site of a castle structure in Shiroishi, Saga Prefecture, Japan. Its ruins have been protected as a Prefectural Historic Site.
In the Muromachi period, Suko Castle was the home castle of the Hirai clan. The lords of the castle included Hirai Tsuneharu. The Ryà «zà Âji clan attacked the castle on four occasions, and it finally fell in 1574.
After the fall of the Hirai clan, Ryà «zà Âji Takanobu moved his residence to Suko Castle. Takanobu made extensive renovations to the castle, adding new kuruwa walls, earthworks, fortifications, a double moat, and a koguchi entrance, expanding it to 560 m on east-west axis and 580 m on north-south axis, making it the largest flatland-mountain castle in Saga Prefecture. As a result of the renovations, it became an important castle that effectively ruled and controlled northern Kyushu.
During the Sengoku period, the Ryà «zà Âji clan, along with the à Âtomo clan and Shimazu clan, ruled Kyushu as one of the three great daimyo of Kyushu. From Suko Castle, Takanobu ruled Hizen, Higo, Buzen, Chikugo, and Chikuzen Provinces, and Suko Castle became the capital of the great domain.
When Takanobu was killed in the Battle of Okitawate, his younger brother, Ryà «zà Âji Nobukane, became the lord of the castle.
In 1580, Ryà «zà Âji Masaie succeeded his father and moved to Suko Castle.