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Aerial view of the Kyōto-gyoen in 2020 with the Imperial Palace in the northern part. The Palace is situated in the Kyōto-gyoen (京都御苑), a large rectangular enclosure 1,300 metres (4,300 ft) north to south and 700 metres (2,300 ft) east to west. It also contains the Sentō Imperial Palace gardens and the Kyoto State Guest House.
The Kyoto Sentō Imperial Palace (京都仙洞御所, Kyōto Sentō-gosho) 22 acres (89,000 m 2)) is a large garden in Kyoto, Japan, formerly the grounds of a palace for retired emperors. It is administered by the Imperial Household Agency and is opened to visitors.
The Katsura Imperial Villa (桂離宮, Katsura Rikyū), or Katsura Detached Palace, is an Imperial residence with associated gardens and outbuildings in the western suburbs of Kyoto, Japan. Located on the western bank of the Katsura River in Katsura , Nishikyō-ku , the Villa is 8km distant from the main Kyoto Imperial Palace .
Upper Garden pond. The Shugaku-in Imperial Villa (修学院離宮, Shugaku-in Rikyū), or Shugaku-in Detached Palace, is a set of gardens and outbuildings (mostly teahouses) in the hills of the eastern suburbs of Kyoto, Japan (separate from the Kyoto Imperial Palace).
During the Edo period (1603 – 1868) a Garden House and multiple mansions of aristocrats stood in the northeastern part such as of the Yanagihara family and Kushige family. The Kyoto Imperial Palace is in the northern part of Kyōto-Gyoen National Garden (京都御苑). It was constructed in 1331 and the Emperors lived there until 1869.
The characters attend festivals in the old Kyoto imperial palace garden, take boat trips on the lake, listen to music and watch formal dances under the trees. [63] Gardens were often the subject of poems during the Heian period.
Kyoto Gyoen National Garden (京都御所, Kyōto-gosho) is a 65-hectare national garden of Japan that was established after the Japanese capital was transferred from Kyoto to Tokyo. [1] It is situated around the Kyoto Imperial Palace .
Kuni Palace: Kizugawa, Kyoto: Imperial palace of Kuni-kyō (740–744), abandoned and destroyed over time Fujiwara Palace: Kashihara, Nara: Imperial palace of Fujiwara-kyō (694–710), abandoned and destroyed over time Kiyomihara Palace: Asuka, Yamato: Last imperial palace in Asuka (672-694) before the court moved to Fujiwara-kyō Okamoto ...