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The Ryukyuan pavilion, known as ''Bôgakurô'' (Pavilion for Admiring the Peak [i.e. Sakurajima]), is a small, simple square structure, in a style typically known in mainland Japan as ''azumaya''. It features a tiled floor, with tiles supposedly based on those of the [[Epang Palace]] of [[Qin Shihuangdi|the First Emperor of Qin]], low to the ground, with short wooden fencing around the site, and a simple tiled roof. A plaque hung on the inside, reading ''bôgakurô'', is done in the style of the calligraphy of [[Wang Xizhi]]. Believed to have originally been given to the Shimazu as a gift from the king of Ryûkyû in the early 17th century, it was the site in the mid-19th century of a significant meeting between [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]] and [[Shimazu Nariakira]].
 
The Ryukyuan pavilion, known as ''Bôgakurô'' (Pavilion for Admiring the Peak [i.e. Sakurajima]), is a small, simple square structure, in a style typically known in mainland Japan as ''azumaya''. It features a tiled floor, with tiles supposedly based on those of the [[Epang Palace]] of [[Qin Shihuangdi|the First Emperor of Qin]], low to the ground, with short wooden fencing around the site, and a simple tiled roof. A plaque hung on the inside, reading ''bôgakurô'', is done in the style of the calligraphy of [[Wang Xizhi]]. Believed to have originally been given to the Shimazu as a gift from the king of Ryûkyû in the early 17th century, it was the site in the mid-19th century of a significant meeting between [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]] and [[Shimazu Nariakira]].
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The garden is also home to the oldest ''kyokusui'' garden in Japan,<ref>A style of garden designed to allow for imitation of the famous Orchid Pavilion Gathering organized by Wang Xizhi in [[353]], in which participants floated wine cups on a small stream within Wang's garden, and played a game of trying to compose a poem before the next cup passed them.</ref> and a variety of [[Bakumatsu period|Bakumatsu]]/[[Meiji period]] technological innovations, including a hydroelectric dam which powered not only the factories of the Shûseikan complex, but also electric lights within the Iso residence. The first gaslamp in Japan was lit within a stone lantern in the garden in [[1857]].<ref>Plaque for gaslights on "History and Culture Street," just outside the walls and moat of the former site of [[Kagoshima castle]].[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15210448476/sizes/l]</ref>
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The garden is also home to the oldest ''kyokusui'' garden in Japan,<ref>A style of garden designed to allow for imitation of the famous Orchid Pavilion Gathering organized by Wang Xizhi in [[353]], in which participants floated wine cups on a small stream within Wang's garden, and played a game of trying to compose a poem before the next cup passed them.</ref> and a variety of [[Bakumatsu period|Bakumatsu]]/[[Meiji period]] technological innovations, including an [[1892]] hydroelectric dam which powered not only the factories of the Shûseikan complex, but also electric lights within the Iso residence. The first gaslamp in Japan was lit within a stone lantern in the garden in [[1857]].<ref>Plaque for gaslights on "History and Culture Street," just outside the walls and moat of the former site of [[Kagoshima castle]].[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15210448476/sizes/l]</ref>
    
[[Shimazu Shigehide]] built a waterfall-viewing pavilion in [[1799]] on the hill overlooking the gardens. Known as ''shita no ochaya'' (tearoom in the lower part [of the garden]), it was built in the ''azumaya'' style; this pavilion is no longer extant.
 
[[Shimazu Shigehide]] built a waterfall-viewing pavilion in [[1799]] on the hill overlooking the gardens. Known as ''shita no ochaya'' (tearoom in the lower part [of the garden]), it was built in the ''azumaya'' style; this pavilion is no longer extant.
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