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  2. Tatami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatami

    Before the mid-16th century, the ruling nobility and samurai slept on tatami or woven mats called goza (茣蓙), while commoners used straw mats or loose straw for bedding. [7] Tatami were gradually popularized and reached the homes of commoners toward the end of the 17th century. [8]

  3. Tameshigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tameshigiri

    Some substances were wara (藁; rice straw), goza (茣蓙; woven rush mats) or tatami-omote (畳表; the top layer of tatami mats), bamboo, and thin steel sheets. [ 2 ] In addition, there was a wide variety of cuts used on cadavers and occasionally convicted criminals , [ 3 ] from tabi-gata (ankle cut) to O-kesa (diagonal cut from shoulder to ...

  4. Washitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washitsu

    The size of a washitsu is measured by the number of tatami mats, using the counter word jō (畳), which, depending on the area, are between 1.5 m 2 and 1.8 m 2. (See tatami.) Typical room sizes are six or eight tatami mats in a private home. There are also half-sized mats, as in a 4.5-tatami room.

  5. Reed mat (craft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_mat_(craft)

    In Japan, a traditional reed mat is the tatami (畳). Tatami are covered with a weft-faced weave of soft rush (藺草, igusa) (common rush), on a warp of hemp or weaker cotton. There are four warps per weft shed, two at each end (or sometimes two per shed, one at each end, to cut costs).

  6. Housing in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_in_Japan

    Additionally, advertisements quote the sizes of the rooms—most importantly, the living room—with measurements in tatami mats (jō (畳) in Japanese), traditional mats woven from rice straw that are standard sizes: 176 by 88 cm (69 by 35 in) in the Tokyo region and 191 cm by 95.5 cm in western Japan. "2DK; one six-tatami Japanese-style room ...

  7. Taiwanese units of measurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiwanese_units_of_measurement

    The measurement refers to the traditional size of a Japanese flooring mat called a Tatami mat (made of woven dried grass) which were positioned to completely cover the floor of traditional Japanese homes, therefore it became a convenient measurement tool as mat area was standardised hundreds of years ago.

  8. Goza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goza

    Gozo (mat) , woven mat similar to tatami; Gozo (name) , Japanese place name and family name come from nobleman's seat; Dial-Gozo House, an American 1880s-era historic house in Florida; Sara Gozo, American pediatrician

  9. Ken (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_(unit)

    The length also appears in other contexts, such as the standard length of the bō staff in Japanese martial arts and the standard dimensions of the tatami mats. As these are used to cover the floors of most Japanese houses, floor surfaces are still commonly measured not in square meters but in "tatami" which are equivalent to half of a square ken.

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