Origins The ideas central to Japanese gardens were first introduced to Japan during the
Asuka period (). , a
Shinto shrine begun in the 7th century, surrounded by white gravel Japanese gardens first appeared on the island of
Honshu, the large central island of Japan. Their aesthetic was influenced by the distinct characteristics of the Honshu landscape: rugged volcanic peaks, narrow valleys, mountain streams with waterfalls and cascades, lakes, and beaches of small stones. They were also influenced by the rich variety of flowers and different species of trees, particularly evergreen trees, on the islands, and by the four distinct seasons in Japan, including hot, wet summers and snowy winters. Japanese gardens have their roots in the national religion of
Shinto, with its story of the creation of eight perfect islands, and of the , the lakes of the gods. Prehistoric
Shinto shrines to the , the gods and spirits, are found on beaches and in forests all over the island. They often took the form of unusual rocks or trees marked with cords of rice fiber () and surrounded with white stones or pebbles, a symbol of purity. The white gravel courtyard became a distinctive feature of Shinto shrines, Imperial Palaces, Buddhist temples, and
Zen gardens. Although its original meaning is somewhat obscure, one of the Japanese words for garden——came to mean a place that had been cleansed and purified in anticipation of the arrival of , and the Shinto reverence for great rocks, lakes, ancient trees, and other "dignitaries of nature" would exert an enduring influence on Japanese garden design. Japanese gardens were also strongly influenced by the Chinese philosophy of
Daoism and
Amida Buddhism, imported from China in or around 552 CE. Daoist legends spoke of five mountainous islands inhabited by the
Eight Immortals, who lived in perfect harmony with nature. Each Immortal flew from his mountain home on the back of a
crane. The islands themselves were located on the back of an enormous
sea turtle. In Japan, the five islands of the Chinese legend became one island, called Horai-zen, or Mount
Horai. Replicas of this legendary mountain, the symbol of a perfect world, are a common feature of Japanese gardens, as are rocks representing turtles and cranes.
In antiquity The earliest recorded Japanese gardens were the
pleasure gardens of the emperors and nobles. They are mentioned in several brief passages of the , the first chronicle of Japanese history, published in 720 CE. In spring 74 CE, the chronicle recorded: "The
Emperor Keikō put a few carp into a pond, and rejoiced to see them morning and evening". The following year, "The Emperor launched a double-hulled boat in the pond of Ijishi at Ihare, and went aboard with his imperial concubine, and they feasted sumptuously together". In 486, the chronicle recorded that "The
Emperor Kenzō went into the garden and feasted at the edge of a winding stream". Chinese gardens had a very strong influence on early Japanese gardens. In or around 552 CE, Buddhism was officially installed from China, via Korea, into Japan. Between 600 and 612 CE, the Japanese emperor sent four legations to the court of the Chinese
Sui dynasty. Between 630 and 838 CE, the Japanese court sent fifteen more legations to the court of the
Tang dynasty. These legations, with more than five hundred members each, included diplomats, scholars, students, Buddhist monks, and translators. They brought back Chinese writing, art objects, and detailed descriptions of Chinese gardens. In 612 CE, the
Empress Suiko had a garden built with an artificial mountain, representing Shumi-Sen, or
Mount Sumeru, reputed in Hindu and Buddhist legends to be located at the centre of the world. During the reign of the same empress, one of her ministers, Soga no Umako, had a garden built at his palace featuring a lake with several small islands, representing the islands of the Eight Immortals famous in Chinese legends and
Daoist philosophy. This palace became the property of the Japanese emperors, was named "The Palace of the Isles", and was mentioned several times in the , the "Collection of Countless Leaves", the oldest known collection of Japanese poetry.
Nara period (710–794) The
Nara period is named after its capital city
Nara. The first authentically Japanese gardens were built in this city at the end of the 8th century. Shorelines and stone settings were naturalistic, different from the heavier, earlier continental mode of constructing pond edges. Two such gardens have been found at excavations, both of which were used for poetry-writing festivities. One of these gardens, the East Palace garden at
Heijō Palace, Nara, has been faithfully reconstructed using the same location and even the original
garden features that had been excavated. It appears from the small amount of literary and archaeological evidence available that the Japanese gardens of this time were modest versions of the Imperial gardens of the Tang dynasty, with large lakes scattered with artificial islands and artificial mountains. Pond edges were constructed with heavy rocks as embankment. While these gardens had some Buddhist and Daoist symbolism, they were meant to be pleasure gardens, and places for festivals and celebrations. Recent archaeological excavations in the ancient capital of Nara have brought to light the remains of two 8th-century gardens associated with the Imperial Court, a pond and stream garden – the To-in – located within the precinct of the Imperial Palace and a stream garden – Kyuseki – found within the modern city. They may be modeled after Chinese gardens, but the rock formations found in the To-in would appear to have more in common with prehistoric Japanese stone monuments than with Chinese antecedents, and the natural, serpentine course of the Kyuseki stream garden may be far less formal than what existed in Tang China. Whatever their origins, both the To-in and Kyuseki clearly anticipate certain developments in later Japanese gardens.
Heian period (794–1185) In 794 CE, at the beginning of the
Heian period (794–1185 CE), the Japanese court moved its capital to
Heian-kyō (present-day
Kyoto). During this period, there were three different kinds of gardens: palace gardens and the gardens of nobles in the capital, the gardens of villas at the edge of the city, and the gardens of temples. The architecture of the palaces, residences and gardens in the Heian period followed Chinese practice. Houses and gardens were aligned on a north-south axis, with the residence to the north and the ceremonial buildings and main garden to the south, there were two long wings to the south, like the arms of an armchair, with the garden between them. The gardens featured one or more lakes connected by bridges and winding streams. The south garden of the imperial residences had a uniquely Japanese feature: a large empty area of white sand or gravel. The emperor was the chief priest of Japan, and the white sand represented purity, and was a place where the gods could be invited to visit. The area was used for religious ceremonies and dances for the welcoming of the gods. The layout of the garden itself was strictly determined according to the principles of traditional Chinese
geomancy, or
Feng Shui. The first known book on the art of the Japanese garden, the (
Records of Garden Keeping), written in the 11th century, said: The Imperial gardens of the Heian period were
water gardens, where visitors promenaded in elegant lacquered boats, listening to music, viewing the distant mountains, singing, reading poetry, painting, and admiring the scenery. The social life in the gardens was memorably described in the classic Japanese novel
The Tale of Genji, written in about 1005 by
Murasaki Shikibu, a lady-in-waiting to the empress. The traces of one such artificial lake, Osawa no ike, near the
Daikaku-ji temple in Kyoto, still can be seen. It was built by the
Emperor Saga, who ruled from 809 to 823, and was said to be inspired by
Dongting Lake in China. A scaled-down replica of the
Kyoto Imperial Palace of 794, the
Heian-jingū, was built in Kyoto in 1895 to celebrate the 1100th birthday of the city. The south garden is famous for its
cherry blossom in spring, and for azaleas in the early summer. The west garden is known for its irises in June, and the large east garden lake recalls the leisurely boating parties of the 8th century. Notable existing or recreated Heian gardens include: •
Daikaku-ji •
Byōdō-in •
Kyoto Imperial Palace •
Jōruri-ji File:Osawaike spring Kyoto 001 JPN.jpg|Osawa lake in Kyoto was part of the old imperial gardens of the
Emperor Saga (809–823). File:Miniature Model of HigashiSanjoDono.jpg|Model of a residence and garden at Heian-kyō (Kyoto), around 1000 Heian-jingu shinen09bs3216.jpg|A 19th-century scaled-down reconstruction of the Heian-jingū, the first
Kyoto Imperial Palace garden, as it was in 794 File:Heian-jingu shinen IMG 5748 0-25.JPG|Stepping stones in the garden of the first Kyoto Imperial Palace. These stones were originally part of a 16th-century bridge over the
Kamo River, which was destroyed by an earthquake. File:Oike-Niwa.JPG|Recreated garden of the old
Kyoto Imperial Palace Kamakura and Muromachi periods (1185–1573) , the Golden Pavilion (1398) The weakness of the emperors and the rivalry of feudal warlords resulted in two civil wars (1156 and 1159), which destroyed most of Kyoto and its gardens. The capital moved to
Kamakura, and then in 1336 back to the Muromachi quarter of Kyoto. The emperors ruled in name only; real power was held by a military governor, the . During this period, the government reopened relations with China, which had been broken off almost three hundred years earlier. Japanese monks went again to study in China, and Chinese monks came to Japan, fleeing the Mongol invasions. The monks brought with them a new form of Buddhism, called simply
Zen, or "meditation". Japan enjoyed a renaissance in religion, in the arts, and particularly in gardens. The term
Zen garden appears in English writing in the 1930s for the first time, in Japan , or comes up even later, from the 1950s. It applies to a
Song China-inspired composition technique derived from ink-painting. The composition or construction of such small, scenic gardens have no relation to religious Zen. Several of the famous Zen gardens of Kyoto were the work of one man,
Musō Soseki (1275–1351). He was a monk, a ninth-generation descendant of the
Emperor Uda and a formidable court politician, writer and organizer, who armed and financed ships to open trade with China, and founded an organization called the Five Mountains, made up of the most powerful Zen monasteries in Kyoto. He was responsible for the building of the zen gardens of
Nanzen-ji,
Saihō-ji (the Moss Garden), and
Tenryū-ji. Notable gardens of the Kamakura and Muromachi periods include: •
Kinkaku-ji (the Golden Pavilion) •
Ginkaku-ji (the Silver Pavilion) •
Nanzen-ji •
Saihō-ji (the Moss Garden) •
Tenryū-ji •
Daisen-in Ginkaku-ji after being restored in 2008.jpg|
Ginkaku-ji, or the Silver Pavilion, in Kyoto, a Zen Buddhist temple (1482) File:Zen garden at Ginkaku-ji (90).jpg|The Zen rock garden of Ginkaku-ji features a miniature mountain shaped like Mount Fuji. Daisen-in1.jpg|The garden of
Daisen-in Kyoto (1513) NanzenjiNanzenin teien.jpg|
Nanzen-ji garden, Kyoto, built by
Musō Soseki. Not all Zen gardens were made of rock and sand; monks here contemplated a forest scene. File:Tenryuji Kyoto05s3s4592.jpg|
Tenryū-ji garden in Kyoto. The Sogen pond, created by Musō Soseki, is one of the few surviving features of the original garden.
Momoyama period (1568–1600) The
Momoyama period was short, just 32 years, and was largely occupied with the wars between the , the leaders of the feudal Japanese clans. The new centers of power and culture in Japan were the fortified castles of the , around which new cities and gardens appeared. The characteristic garden of the period featured one or more ponds or lakes next to the main residence, or , not far from the castle. These gardens were meant to be seen from above, from the castle or residence. The had developed the skills of cutting and lifting large rocks to build their castles, and they had armies of soldiers to move them. The artificial lakes were surrounded by beaches of small stones and decorated with arrangements of boulders, with natural stone bridges and
stepping stones. The gardens of this period combined elements of a promenade garden, meant to be seen from the winding garden paths, with elements of the Zen garden, such as artificial mountains, meant to be contemplated from a distance. The most famous garden of this kind, built in 1592, is situated near the Tokushima castle on the island of
Shikoku. Its notable features include a bridge long made of two natural stones. Another notable garden of the period still existing is
Sanbō-in, rebuilt by
Toyotomi Hideyoshi in 1598 to celebrate the festival of the cherry blossom and to recreate the splendor of an ancient garden. Three hundred garden-builders worked on the project, digging the lakes and installing seven hundred boulders in a space of . The garden was designed to be seen from the veranda of the main pavilion, or from the "Hall of the Pure View", located on a higher elevation in the garden. In the east of the garden, on a peninsula, is an arrangement of stones designed to represent the mythical Mount Horai. A wooden bridge leads to an island representing a crane, and a stone bridge connects this island to another representing a tortoise, which is connected by an earth-covered bridge back to the peninsula. The garden also includes a waterfall at the foot of a wooded hill. One characteristic of the Momoyama period garden visible at Sanbō-in is the close proximity of the buildings to the water. Following Sen no Rikyū's rules, the teahouse was supposed to suggest the cottage of a hermit-monk. It was a small and very plain wooden structure, often with a thatched roof, with just enough room inside for two
tatami mats. The only decoration allowed inside a scroll with an inscription and a branch of a tree. It did not have a view of the garden. The garden was also small, and constantly watered to be damp and green. It usually had a cherry tree or elm to bring color in the spring, but otherwise did not have bright flowers or exotic plants that would distract the attention of the visitor. A path led to the entrance of the teahouse. Along the path was waiting bench for guests and a privy, and a stone water-basin near the teahouse, where the guests rinsed their hands and mouths before entering the tea room through a small, square door called , or "crawling-in entrance", which requires bending low to pass through. Sen no Rikyū decreed that the garden should be left unswept for several hours before the ceremony, so that leaves would be scattered in a natural way on the path. Notable gardens of the period include: • Tokushima Castle garden on the island of
Shikoku. • Tai-an tea house at Myōki-an Temple in
Kyoto, built in 1582 by
Sen no Rikyū. •
Sanbō-in at
Daigo-ji, in
Kyoto Prefecture (1598) File:Tokushima Castle lordly Front Palace Garden02s3872.jpg|Garden at the Tokushima Castle, dominated by rocks File:Momiji Daigoji4.JPG|The garden at
Daigo-ji (1598) is famous for its cherry blossoms.
Edo period (1615–1867) in Kyoto (1641–1662), the prototype for the promenade, or stroll garden , perfectly integrated into the garden During the
Edo period, power was won and consolidated by the
Tokugawa clan, who became the , and moved the capital to
Edo, which became
Tokyo. The emperor remained in Kyoto as a figurehead leader, with authority only over cultural and religious affairs. While the political center of Japan was now Tokyo, Kyoto remained the cultural capital, the center for religion and art. The provided the emperors with little power, but with generous subsidies for building gardens. The Edo period saw the widespread use of a new kind of Japanese architecture, called , which means literally "building according to chosen taste". The term first appeared at the end of the 16th century referring to isolated tea houses. It originally applied to the simple country houses of samurai warriors and Buddhist monks, but in the Edo period it was used in every kind of building, from houses to palaces. The style was used in the most famous garden of the period, the
Katsura Imperial Villa in Kyoto. The buildings were built in a very simple, undecorated style, a prototype for future Japanese architecture. They opened up onto the garden, so that the garden seemed entirely part of the building; whether the visitor was inside or outside of the building, they would ideally always feel they were in the center of nature. The garden buildings were arranged so that were always seen from a diagonal, rather than straight on. This arrangement had the poetic name , which meant literally "a formation of wild geese in flight". Most of the gardens of the Edo period were either promenade gardens or dry rock Zen gardens, and they were usually much larger than earlier gardens. The promenade gardens of the period made extensive use of
borrowed scenery (). Vistas of distant mountains are integrated in the design of the garden; or, even better, building the garden on the side of a mountain and using the different elevations to attain views over landscapes outside the garden. Edo promenade gardens were often composed of a series of , or "famous views", similar to postcards. These could be imitations of famous natural landscapes, like
Mount Fuji, or scenes from Taoist or Buddhist legends, or landscapes illustrating verses of poetry. Unlike Zen gardens, they were designed to portray nature as it appeared, not the internal rules of nature. Well-known Edo-period gardens include: •
Shugakuin Imperial Villa •
Shisen-dō (1641) •
Suizen-ji •
Hama Rikyu •
Kōraku-en (
Okayama) •
Ritsurin Garden (
Takamatsu) •
Koishikawa Kōraku-en (
Tokyo) (1629) •
Ninna-ji, Kyoto •
Enman-in, Otsu •
Sanzen-in, north of Kyoto •
Sengan-en, Kagoshima (1658) •
Chishaku-in, southeast of Kyoto •
Jōju-in, in the temple of
Kiyomizu, southeast of Kyoto (1688–1703) •
Manshu-in, northeast of Kyoto (1656) •
Nanzen-ji, east of Kyoto (1688–1703) File:160319 Korakuen Okayama Japan04s3.jpg|
Kōraku-en in Okayama, begun in 1700 File:150504 Ritsurin Park Takamatsu Kagawa pref Japan01s3.jpg|
Ritsurin Garden in Takamatsu, begun in 1625 File:Shisendo DSC0480.jpg|The hermitage garden of the poet and scholar Ishikawa Jozan at
Shisen-dō, built in 1641. It later became a temple. File:Ninnaji Kyoto16s3s4592.jpg|The north garden at
Ninna-ji in Kyoto, a classic promenade garden File:Ninnaji Kyoto18s3s4320.jpg|The south garden at Ninna-ji, a Zen rock garden File:Koishikawa Korakuen 060607.jpg|
Koishikawa Kōrakuen Garden in Tokyo, begun in 1629, is now surrounded by office buildings. File:TofukujiReiunin1.jpg|The most famous view of Suizen-ji is a miniature mountain resembling Mount Fuji.
Meiji period (1868–1912) The
Meiji period saw the modernization of Japan, and the re-opening of Japan to the West. Many of the old private gardens had been abandoned and left to ruin. In 1871, a new law transformed many gardens from the earlier Edo period into public parks, preserving them. Garden designers, confronted with ideas from the West experimented with western styles, leading to such gardens as
Kyu-Furukawa Gardens, or
Shinjuku Gyoen. Others, more in the north of Japan kept to Edo period blueprint design. A third wave was the naturalistic style of gardens, invented by captains of industry and powerful politicians like
Aritomo Yamagata. Many gardeners soon were designing and constructing gardens catering to this taste. One of the gardens well-known for his technical perfection in this style was
Ogawa Jihei VII, also known as Ueji. Notable gardens of this period include: •
Kyu-Furukawa Gardens •
Kenroku-en, 18th and 19th centuries, finished in 1874. •
Chinzan-so in Tokyo in 1877. •
Murin-an in Kyoto, finished 1898. File:Kenrokuen10-r.jpg|Kenroku-en in Kanazawa File:Chinzan-so4.jpg|Chinzan-so in Tokyo File:Murin-an, Kyoto - IMG 5104.JPG|Murin-an in Kyoto
Modern Japanese gardens (1912 to present) During the
Shōwa period (1926–1989), many traditional gardens were built by businessmen and politicians. After World War II, the principal builders of gardens were no longer private individuals, but banks, hotels, universities and government agencies. The Japanese garden became an extension of the landscape architecture with the building. New gardens were designed by
landscape architects, and often used modern building materials such as concrete. Some modern Japanese gardens, such as
Tōfuku-ji, designed by
Mirei Shigemori, were inspired by classical models. Other modern gardens have taken a much more radical approach to the traditions. One example is
Awaji Yumebutai, a garden on the island of
Awaji, in the
Seto Inland Sea of Japan, designed by
Tadao Ando. It was built as part of a resort and conference center on a steep slope, where land had been stripped away to make an island for an airport. File:TofukujiGarden1.jpg|
Tōfuku-ji, a modern Japanese garden from 1934, designed by
Mirei Shigemori, built on grounds of a 13th-century Zen temple in Kyoto File:Toufuku-ji hojyo7.JPG|The moss garden at Tōfuku-ji, Kyoto File:The Museum of Art Kochi06s3872.jpg|A contemporary Japanese garden at the
Kochi Museum of Art File:Naoshima05.jpg|The garden at the
Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum, using sculpture to imitate the form of island on the horizon File:Adachi Museum of Art Garden 02.jpg|Garden of the Adachi Museum of Art File:Awaji yumebutai01s3872.jpg|
Awaji Yumebutai, a contemporary garden on the island of
Awaji, Hyōgo (2000) File:Awaji yumebutai04s3200.jpg|Shell beach garden, part of the Awaji Yumebutai on the island of
Awaji, Hyōgo (2000) File:Jissoin-Temple-Stone-Garden.JPG|
Jissō-in rock garden in Iwakura (Kyoto), reformed in 2013 ==Garden elements==