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The pond of the Ninomaru Garden The Ninomaru Garden adjoining the Ninomaru Palace. The castle area has several gardens and groves of cherry and Japanese plum trees. The Ninomaru garden was designed by the landscape architect and tea master Kobori Enshū. It is located between the two main rings of fortifications, next to the palace of the same ...
English: Plan of Ninomaru Palace of Nijō Castle. 1) Yanagi-no-ma (Willow Room), Wakamatsu-no-ma (Young Pine Room) 2) Tozamurai-no-ma (Retainers' Room) 3) Shikidai-no-ma (Reception Room) 4) Ōhiroma: San-no-ma (Third Chamber) 5) Ōhiroma: Ichi-no-ma (First Grand Chamber), Ni-no-ma (Second Grand Chamber), Musha-kakushi-no-ma (Bodyguards' Chamber) 6) Kuroshoin (Inner Audience Chamber) 7 ...
L'entrée du palais Ninomaru dans le château de Nijo à Kyoto. Le château de Nijo a été construit en 1603 à Kyoto à proximité du palais de l'Empereur pour Ieyasu Tokugawa, le premier shogun (gouverneur) de la période Edo (1603-1867). C'était le lieu de résidence du shogun lors de ses séjours à Kyoto.
English: Plans of Nijō Castle. 1) Higashi-Ōte-mon (Great Eastern Gate, today main entrance) 2) Guard house 3) Kara-mon 4) Honourable Carriage Approach (main entry to the Ninomaru Palace) 5) Ninomaru Palace 6) Kuroshoin 7) Shiroshoin 8) Ninomaru Garden 9) Pond 10) Kitchen 11) Meals preparation room 12) Storage buildings 13) Resting room 14) Toilets 15) Minami-mon (Southern Gate) 16) Cherry ...
English: View of Ninomaru Palace at Nijō Castle, a flatland castle in Kyoto, part of UNESCO World Heritage Site Ref. Number 688. Español: Vista del palacio de Ninomaru en el castillo de Nijō , un castillo japonés en Kioto que fue declarado Patrimonio de la Humanidad como parte del sitio con número de referencia 688 ).
The ornately decorated complex served as the Kyoto residence and reception hall for the Tokugawa Shōguns until 1867, when the last shōgun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, used its Ninomaru Palace to declare the end of the shogunate and return authority to the Imperial Court.
Ninomaru Palace at Nijō Castle. Residential architecture includes two categories: "modern residences" (住居, jūkyo) from the Meiji period onward and "historical residences" (住宅, jūtaku), which date to before 1867. Presently, the only modern residential National Treasure is the Akasaka Palace in Tokyo, which was built in 1909. [33]
However, as goten (castle palaces) were the central and arguably most important feature of Japanese castles, the palace is a historical part of Nijo Castle. [15] In spite of its residential classification, Ninomaru Goten was actually used primarily for administrative purposes. [16] The Ninomaru Goten structures are not included in the list below.