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Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

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Page 1: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 2: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Nijo Castle (Nijōjō) was built in 1603 as the Kyoto residence of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first shogun of the Edo Period (1603-1867). After the Tokugawa Shogunate fell in 1867, Nijo Castle was used as an imperial palace for a while before being donated to the city and opened up to the public as a historic site. The castle area has several gardens and groves of cherry and plum trees. The Ninomaru garden was designed by the famous landscape architect and tea master, Kobori Enshu. It is located between the two main rings of fortifications, next to the Ninomaru palace

Page 3: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Nijō Castle is a flatland castle in Kyoto, Japan. The castle consists of two concentric rings (Kuruwa) of fortifications, the Ninomaru Palace, the ruins of the Honmaru Palace, various support buildings and several gardens. It is one of the seventeen Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto which have been designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site

Page 4: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The Honmaru

The Ninomaru

The Seiryu-en garden

Nijo Castle can be divided into three areas: the Honmaru (main circle of defense), the Ninomaru and some gardens that encircle the Honmaru and Ninomaru

The Seiryu-en garden

Page 5: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 6: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The Tonan Sumiyagura (Southeast Corner Tower) built in about 1603 of the Edo Period, has been designated as an Important cultural property

Page 7: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 8: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The moat outside of historic Nijo Castle in Kyoto

Page 9: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

When this castle was built, there were four corner towers in this castle

Page 10: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

However, the two of these

disappeared by the great Kyoto’s fire of the Tenmei

Era in 1788

Page 11: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The second corner tower

Page 12: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Just outside the Ninomaru Palace is the lovely strolling pond garden titled simply as “The Ninomaru Garden”. The Ninomaru Garden was designed by famous landscape architect and tea master Kobori Enshu (1579-1647). Because this garden is designed to be able to look from 8 directions, it is also called ‘Hachijin-no-niwa (the garden of eight positions)’

Page 13: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

 In 2006, the American

magazine Journal of Japanese Gardening

ranked Ninomaru Garden 8th out of 731 gardens all

over Japan

Page 14: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Nothing in a Japanese garden is natural or left to

chance; each plant is chosen

according to aesthetic

principles, either to hide

undesirable sights, to serve

as a backdrop to certain garden features, or to

create a picturesque scene, like a landscape painting or postcard

Page 15: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 16: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 17: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Trees are carefully chosen and arranged for their autumn colors. Moss is often used to suggest that the garden is ancient. Flowers are also carefully chosen by their season of flowering

Page 18: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Some plants are chosen for their religious symbolism, such as the pine, which represents longevity

Page 19: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Ninomaru garden is constructed around a large central pond

decorated with a variety of stones of all shapes and

sizes,

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and the pond also has three islands; Hōrai-jima (Island

of Eternal Happiness), Tsuru-jima

(Crane Island) and Kame-jima (Turtle Island)  

Page 21: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The main purpose of a

Japanese garden is to attempt to be

a space that captures the

natural beauties of nature

Page 22: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The two main principles

incorporated in a Japanese garden

are scaled reduction and symbolization

Page 23: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

A cascade or waterfall is an

important element in Japanese gardens, a

miniature version of the waterfalls

of Japanese mountain streams

Page 24: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

A cycadophyta (palmlike gymnosperm) is a distant relative to palm-fern commonly known as cycad

Page 25: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Ninomaru garden has a large pond with three islands

that symbolize Horai-San, and the crane and

turtle mountains of the Taoist mythology

Page 26: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 27: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 28: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Traditional Japanese

gardens have small islands in

the lakes. In sacred temple

gardens, there is usually an island

which represents Mount

Penglai or Mount Horai, the traditional home

of the Eight Immortals

Page 29: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 30: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 31: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The Ninomaru garden is located between the two main rings of fortifications, next to the palace of the same name

Page 32: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The Ninomaru garden has a large pond with three islands and features numerous carefully placed stones and topiary pine trees

Page 33: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The castle area has several gardens and groves of cherry and plum trees, which bloom between March and April

Page 34: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Kyoto was the capital of Japan for over a millennium, and carries a reputation as its most beautiful city. What we are loving about Japan is the attention to detail, its delicacies in special features (gardens, food, shops), the orderliness of the community, and the humbleness and helpfulness of the people

https://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Japan/Kyoto/Kyoto/blog-914902.html

Page 35: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 36: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Protection of the cycads from the winter at the Ninomaru 

Page 37: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Japanese gardens always have

water, either a pond or stream, or,

in the dry rock garden,

represented by white sand

Page 38: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 39: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

In Buddhist symbolism, water

and stone are the yin and yang, two opposites that complement and complete each

other

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Page 41: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 42: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Sakuteiki is the oldest published Japanese text on garden-making. Sakuteiki is most likely the oldest garden planning text in the world. It was written in the mid-to-late 11th century

Page 43: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

According to the Sakuteiki, the water should enter the garden from the east or southeast and flow toward the west because the east is the home of the Green Dragon (seiryu) an ancient Chinese divinity adapted in Japan, and the west is the home of the White Tiger, the divinity of the east

Page 44: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Water flowing from east to west will carry away evil, and the owner of the garden will be healthy and have a long life

Page 45: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

The shores of the Ninomaru garden are lined with rocks, the number of which has seemed excessive to critics of the garden

Page 46: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 47: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

 In contrast to Imperial gardens of the Edo Period where long stretches of shore line have no rocks, the shores of Ninomaru and other Shogunal gardens are lined with stones set virtually "shoulder to shoulder"

Page 48: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens
Page 49: Japan80 Kyoto22 Nijo Castle Ninomaru gardens

Text: InternetPictures: Nicoleta Leu Internet Sanda FoişoreanuCopyright: All the images belong to their authors

Presentation: Sanda Foişoreanuhttps://plus.google.com/+SandaMichaela

Sound: Shigeru Umebayashi - Yumeji's Theme (In The Mood for Love) 2017