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The Rikugien, or Six Virtues Gardens, in [[Tokyo|Tokyo's]] Bunkyô-ku, was one of the first publicly accessible municipal gardens or parks in Japan. Built around [[1699]] to [[1706]] by [[Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu]] in [[Edo]], it is still extant and open to the public today.
 
The Rikugien, or Six Virtues Gardens, in [[Tokyo|Tokyo's]] Bunkyô-ku, was one of the first publicly accessible municipal gardens or parks in Japan. Built around [[1699]] to [[1706]] by [[Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu]] in [[Edo]], it is still extant and open to the public today.
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Prior to Yoshiyasu's construction of the garden, in [[1657]], the [[Maeda clan]] of [[Kaga han]] built their ''[[daimyo yashiki|naka-yashiki]]'' (middle mansion) on the site. The mansion was later demoted to ''shimo-yashiki'' (lower mansion), and in [[1695]], a portion of its grounds was given by [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Tsunayoshi]] to Yoshiyasu as his own 27,000 ''[[Japanese Measurements|tsubo]]'' lower mansion. Yoshiyasu then began constructing a garden on the site, naming it "Rikugien" after a line from a [[waka|poem]] by [[Ki no Tsurayuki]].
    
The garden covers roughly 25 acres (10 ''ha''), and includes an artificial lake and small hills arranged in the style of a private aristocratic or samurai garden, though on a larger scale. Open to the public, it became a popular place for townspeople of Edo to gather for seasonal celebrations such as ''[[hanami]]'' (appreciating [[cherry blossoms]] in spring), and ''[[momijigari]]'' (admiring the leaves changing color in fall), as well as other occasions. [[Courtesans]] also came to frequently display themselves in the gardens.
 
The garden covers roughly 25 acres (10 ''ha''), and includes an artificial lake and small hills arranged in the style of a private aristocratic or samurai garden, though on a larger scale. Open to the public, it became a popular place for townspeople of Edo to gather for seasonal celebrations such as ''[[hanami]]'' (appreciating [[cherry blossoms]] in spring), and ''[[momijigari]]'' (admiring the leaves changing color in fall), as well as other occasions. [[Courtesans]] also came to frequently display themselves in the gardens.
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Penelope Mason. ''History of Japanese Art''. Second Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. p275.
 
*Penelope Mason. ''History of Japanese Art''. Second Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. p275.
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*Gallery labels, Tôyô Bunko.
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*Signs on-site at Rikugien.
 
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