Yousuitei Villa: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Samurai Homes |Castle=Wakayama Castle |English Name=Yousuitei Villa |Japanese Name=養翠亭・養翠園 |Year=1818 |Residence Type=Daimyo |Samurai Residence Designations=Registered Tangible Cultural Property |Samurai Residence Features=Garden, House |Visitor Information=9:00-17:00; ¥600 |Website=https://yosuien.com/ |City=Wakayama |Prefecture=Wakayama Prefecture |Background=Yōsui-en / Yōsui-tei (Nishihama, Wakayama) 養翠園・養翠亭 [和歌山県和歌...") |
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|Year=1818 | |Year=1818 | ||
|Residence Type=Daimyo | |Residence Type=Daimyo | ||
|Samurai Residence Features=Garden, House | |Samurai Residence Features=Garden, House | ||
|Visitor Information=9:00-17:00; ¥600 | |Visitor Information=9:00-17:00; ¥600 | ||
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|City=Wakayama | |City=Wakayama | ||
|Prefecture=Wakayama Prefecture | |Prefecture=Wakayama Prefecture | ||
|Background= | |Background=Yōsui-en is the daimyō garden of Wakayama Domain (Kishū), the domain of the Kii-Tokugawa. It is also the site of the Yōsui-tei, a villa and complex of teahouses built in the Sukiya-style. Yōsui-en was built by Tokugawa Harutomi, the tenth lord of Wakayama Domain, in 1818. | ||
Yōsui-en is the daimyō garden of Wakayama Domain (Kishū), the domain of the Kii-Tokugawa. It is also the site of the Yōsui-tei, a villa and complex of teahouses built in the Sukiya-style. Yōsui-en was built by Tokugawa Harutomi, the tenth lord of Wakayama Domain, in 1818. | |||
The garden is centred around a brackish pond fed by sea water from two sluices, the Himon gates. One of these is part of a lock called the Funagura (boat depot). The Funagura is now silted up and home to many crabs which live in crab holes they burrow in the sandy mud. | The garden is centred around a brackish pond fed by sea water from two sluices, the Himon gates. One of these is part of a lock called the Funagura (boat depot). The Funagura is now silted up and home to many crabs which live in crab holes they burrow in the sandy mud. |
Latest revision as of 09:43, 20 September 2025
Yōsui-en is the daimyō garden of Wakayama Domain (Kishū), the domain of the Kii-Tokugawa. It is also the site of the Yōsui-tei, a villa and complex of teahouses built in the Sukiya-style. Yōsui-en was built by Tokugawa Harutomi, the tenth lord of Wakayama Domain, in 1818. The garden is centred aro
Background
Yōsui-en is the daimyō garden of Wakayama Domain (Kishū), the domain of the Kii-Tokugawa. It is also the site of the Yōsui-tei, a villa and complex of teahouses built in the Sukiya-style. Yōsui-en was built by Tokugawa Harutomi, the tenth lord of Wakayama Domain, in 1818.
The garden is centred around a brackish pond fed by sea water from two sluices, the Himon gates. One of these is part of a lock called the Funagura (boat depot). The Funagura is now silted up and home to many crabs which live in crab holes they burrow in the sandy mud.
Yōsui-en's tidal pond is home to a lot of wildlife. It is spanned by the Mitushashi, a series of three bridges, and the Taikobashi, which connects it to Shugoshintō ('Guardian Deity Island'). I saw a cormorant on the Mitsuhashi. These bridges are now concrete, a legacy of Tokugawa Yorimichi, the last head of the Kishū branch of the Tokugawa.
The shioiri-type lake features several rock formations evocative of the mythical Mount Penglai. Certain features nod to Xī Hú (West Lake) in Hángzhōu, China, which I have visited. The garden is adjacent to the surviving halls of the Minato-goten ('Port Palace'), a villa constructed by Tokugawa Nariyuki, the eleventh lord of Wakayama Domain, in 1834.
As for Yōsui-tei, it unfortunately is not open to the public, or wasn't when I visited. It contains a gozanoma (sitting room) where, the brochure tells us, 'Harutomi would graciously sit'. Leading to the gozanoma is a unique corridor called the Hidari Naname Nobori Rōka (Left Diagonal Climbing Corridor) which featured a skewed, diagonal layout of tatami mats, and parallelogram-shaped shōji (paper screens). It's kind of cruel to introduce visitors to such a unique structure but not let them see it, in my view.
Yōsui-tei further features Jissai-an, the oldest tea room in Wakayama Prefecture. This room seats five people comfortably for a tea ceremony. Lord Harutomi is said to have had profound knowledge about the art of sadō (tea ceremony). Jissai-an is not open to the public. However, a recreation of the teahouse can be found at the Wakayama History Hall on the castle grounds.
Yōsui-en is open from 9:00am to 5:00pm year-round (excepting New Year's Day when it opens at 11:00am), and admission is 600¥.
Gallery
Yousuitei Villa Profile | |
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English Name | Yousuitei Villa |
Japanese Name | 養翠亭・養翠園 |
Year | 1818 |
Residence Type | Daimyo |
Features | Garden, House |
Visitor Information | 9:00-17:00; ¥600 |
Website | https://yosuien.com/ |
Location | Wakayama, Wakayama Prefecture |
Castle | Wakayama Castle |
Coordinates | 34.19346, 135.15232 |
Wakayama Castle and nearby Samurai Homes | |
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Admin | |
Visits | |
Added Jcastle | 2025 |
Contributor | ART |