Neha Patil (Editor)

Chinzan so

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Type
  
Japanese garden

Created
  
1877

Phone
  
+81 3-3943-1111

Owner
  
FUJITA KANKO INC.

Location
  
Bunkyō, Tokyo, Japan

Opened
  
1 January 2013

Number of rooms
  
260

Number of restaurants
  
12

Chinzan-so

Address
  
Japan, 〒112-8680 Tokyo, 文京区Sekiguchi, 2−10−8

Hours
  
Closing soon · 6AM–11PMSunday6AM–11PMMonday6AM–11PMTuesday6AM–11PMWednesday6AM–11PMThursday6AM–11PMFriday6AM–11PMSaturday6AM–11PM

Similar
  
Edogawabashi Station, Mejiro Station, Park Hyatt Tokyo, Palace Hotel - Tokyo, Gokokuji Station

Profiles

Chinzan so garden in tokyo japan


Chinzan-so (椿山荘, Chinsan-sō) is a Japanese garden located in Bunkyō, Tokyo. Founded in 1877, the garden is rich in historic remains and artifacts. The garden is part of the Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo property and can be accessed by walking from Edogawabashi Station.

Contents

History

In the 1600s, Matsuo Bashō, a renowned haiku poet of the Edo period, lived in a hut overlooking this property for four years. In the Meiji period the estate owner and well-known statesman Prince Aritomo Yamagata built his mansion here and named it "Chinzan-so" or "House of Camellia" after the numerous camellia flowers that blossomed here; he made use of the undulating topography of the mansion grounds to its best advantage. The Prince hosted many important political meetings here. Records say that the Emperor Meiji held a number of important conferences with his high-ranking dignitaries at the "House of Camellia".

Historical Artifacts

When the property passed on to Baron Heitaro Fujita, he decorated the grounds with historical monuments from all over Japan, especially Kyoto and Toba. A thousand-year-old pagoda was transferred here from the Hiroshima mountains. This three-story pagoda was built by the Chikurin-ji temple monks without using a single nail. The Shiratama Inari Shrine in the center of the garden was removed from the grounds of Shimogamo in Kyoto in 1924. Other cultural treasures scattered throughout the site include carved Taoist and Buddhist images and over thirty stone lanterns. A large pond, waterfall, and natural spring are also part of the garden, as is a 500-year-old sacred tree that measures 4,5 m around its base.

References

Chinzan-so Wikipedia