Home

KYOTO

Make Japanese Lifestyle your homepage

Copyright 2001 - 2008 mi marketing Pty Ltd. ACN 098 375 145 trading as Japanese LifeStyle. All Trademarks belong to their respective owners.

 
This Site Web
Google
Social Bookmarking
Add to: Digg Add to: Del.icio.us Add to: Reddit Add to: Slashdot Add to: Yahoo Add to: Google Add to: Blinklist Add to: Blogmarks

 


KYOTO TOURS

Kyoto Highlights Day Tour
Kyoto Tours
The best of Kyoto in one day.
Kinkakuji Temple - Golden Pavilion
Kiyomizu Temple
Kyoto Imperial Palace
Nijo Castle
Heian Shrine
Sanjusangendo Hall
Kyoto Handicraft Center

Himeji Castle Day Tour
Himeji Castle Tour
Experience Japan's best castle!
World Heritage site.
Includes trip on bullet train
Plus tour sake brewery museum


?
Questions about travel in Tokyo. Ask them in our
travel forum.

 

RYOAN-JI TEMPLE

Ryoan-ji Temple (竜安寺). Ryoan-ji Temple in Kyoto is famous for its Zen garden. Ryoan-ji Temple is considered to be one of the most notable examples of the "dry-landscape" style.

Some say Ryoan-ji Temple garden is the quintessence of Zen art, and perhaps the single greatest masterpiece of Japanese culture. Surrounded by low walls, an austere arrangement of fifteen rocks sits on a bed of white gravel. That's it: no trees, no hills, no ponds, and no trickling water. Nothing you could describe as romantic, distracting or pretty.

Ryoan-ji Temple
Ryoan-ji Temple

So what is it all about? Well, it certainly focuses the mind. Unlike Stonehenge, the Pyramids, Angkor Wat, Salisbury Cathedral, or the temples of Luxor, Ryoan-ji can hardly inspire you with technical achievement, religious imperative or sheer scale. But its minimalism inspires something else – contemplation, introspection, and deliberation on the transience of our own humanity.

Ryoan-ji Temple
Ryoan-ji Temple

No one knows who laid out this simple garden, or precisely when, but it is today as it was yesterday, and tomorrow it will be as it is today. Behind the simple temple that overlooks the rock garden is a stone washbasin called Tsukubai said to have been contributed by Tokugawa Mitsukuni in the 17th century. It bears a simple but profound four-character inscription: "I learn only to be contented". The rest of the grounds are worth a look too - particularly the large pond. Open daily 8am-5pm (Mar-Nov), 8.30am-4.30pm (Dec-Feb). Admission ¥500. Nearest bus stop: Ryōanji-mae.

Ryoan-ji Temple
Other moss covered gardens around the outside of the temple.

Ryoan-ji Temple
A view inside the temple itself.

Kyoto Hotel

Looking for Kyoto Accommodation?
Please support our site by using our Kyoto Hotel reservation system.

(Article based on Wikitravel article by Wikitravel users Nzpcmad, Jose Ramos, John Grillo, Brian Kurkoski, Howard Banwell, Mary and Yann Forget, Jpatokal, Huttite, Miknon and MykReeve. Artilce used under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0.) Photographs Copyright Japanese Lifestyle

Kyoto Travel Topics Discuss
Travel to Kyoto

Last edited on 18/09/08