Xiandong Miscellaneous Garden is a royal garden located in Upper Kyodo District, Kyoto City. It is one of the three royal gardens in Kyoto by the emperor. It is elegant and beautiful, and it is full of the feeling of retreating gardens. Worth a visit.
More
Xiandong Miscellaneous Garden is a royal garden located in Upper Kyodo District, Kyoto City. It is one of the three royal gardens in Kyoto by the emperor. It is elegant and beautiful, and it is full of the feeling of retreating gardens. Worth a visit.
Xiandong Imperial Palace is a small and famous palace castle in Kyoto. It is worth visiting. The small tea pavilion is supported by logs. It is natural and simple. It seems to be a "humble", but it is very deliberate. . . .
Xiandong Imperial Palace (Omiya Imperial Palace): Kyoto Imperial Palace is for the emperor, Xiandong Imperial Palace is for the abdicated emperor, and the Omiya Imperial Palace is for the queen-mother who died. Xiandong Imperial Palace has been burned out, plus there has been no emperor for these years, and there has been no reconstruction. But this year the emperor abdicated, I wonder if it will be rebuilt? Xiandong Yusuo is a large garden, similar to the "secret courtyard" of Seoul's Changde Palace. After all, Xiandong Yu lived in retired old guys, and there was no need to meet various guests. There was a house to live in, and a large garden that could exercise was enough. Figure 4 "one liter of stone", in order to collect these similar-sized stones, a stone was given to one liter of rice. Figure 5 Wake up flower pavilion, said that it is a poem from Li Bai, but did not find it. Figure 6, on the left is the wash basin sent by Fengchen Xiuji's wife Ning Ning, and on the right is the "North Korean lantern" sent by Kato Qingzheng. Since it was sent by Kato Kiyoshi, it was definitely not what he bought, but what he took part in the war of aggression against North Korea. That is to say, the stolen goods are in front of him. Moss is in different shapes and looks good. The last picture was taken at the Kyoto Imperial Palace, which is "hanging window". In South Korea, they claimed that their "separate door" was original, and now it seems to have something similar in Japan. When I went home, I found a photo of the separate door, which was not available online.
This place can not go in casually, just by appointment, someone took a circle inside, about 45 minutes, there is a Chinese interpreter, but it really doesn't feel much meaning, it is an ordinary Japanese courtyard, maybe the time to go is wrong, there are a lot of maple trees planted inside, It might be good when the maple leaves are red, overall it is not worth a trip
Advance reservations are required during this period.
This place is a small courtyard attached to Kyoto's Imperial Garden, there is nothing particularly attractive. It is an ordinary small yard. Anyway, tourists come in and out and no one cares what this place is called. It's quite ordinary.
I feel that this place is more ordinary. Fortunately, he is in Kyoto Hospital, so he does not need to go to another place to stroll around. It takes about 5 minutes. There is no special scenery in ordinary.