Difference between revisions of "Ueno Park"

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Following the destruction of Kan'ei-ji in the [[1868]] [[battle of Ueno]], there were proposals to build a hospital on the temple's former grounds. However, Dutch physician [[A.F. Bauduin]] advocated preserving the site for its natural beauty, and so Ueno Park was established as Japan's first public park in [[1873]], while Kan'ei-ji was restored on a much shrunken grounds nearby.<ref>Plaque on bust of Bauduin in Ueno Park.</ref>
 
Following the destruction of Kan'ei-ji in the [[1868]] [[battle of Ueno]], there were proposals to build a hospital on the temple's former grounds. However, Dutch physician [[A.F. Bauduin]] advocated preserving the site for its natural beauty, and so Ueno Park was established as Japan's first public park in [[1873]], while Kan'ei-ji was restored on a much shrunken grounds nearby.<ref>Plaque on bust of Bauduin in Ueno Park.</ref>
  
A grand reception for [[Ulysses S. Grant]], held in [[1879]], was one of the first major public events held in the park. After that, it became the site for a number of major expositions and events, including the [[Third Domestic Industrial Exposition]], held there in [[1890]], the first modern museum-style exhibition of the works of [[Hokusai]], in 1900, and the first [[Bunten]] (]]Ministry of Education]] Arts Salon) in [[1907]].
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A grand reception for [[Ulysses S. Grant]], held in [[1879]], was one of the first major public events held in the park. The park also served as the site for a number of major expositions and events, including the first three [[Domestic Industrial Exposition]]s, held there in [[1877]], [[1881]], and [[1890]]; the first modern museum-style exhibition of the works of [[Hokusai]], in 1900; and the first [[Bunten]] ([[Ministry of Education]] Arts Salon) in [[1907]].
  
 
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Revision as of 21:27, 22 July 2016

  • Japanese: 上野公園 (Ueno kouen)

Ueno Park is a major public park in Tokyo, and the first public park in Japan. Located on the former grounds of the Tokugawa clan patron temple of Kan'ei-ji, it served as a major site of national ceremonies, expositions, and events in the Meiji period, and is today home to a number of major national institutions, including the Tokyo National Museum, Ueno Zoo, Tokyo University of the Arts, Museum of Western Art, and so forth.

Kan'ei-ji, albeit considerably shrunken, continues to stand to one side of the park; Ueno Tôshôgû, an Inari shrine, and several other Shinto shrines can also be found in the park. Other notable sights in the park include a statue of Saigô Takamori designed by Takamura Kôun and unveiled in 1898, and a gravesite for the Shôgitai, established in 1869 and expanded in 1874.

History

Following the destruction of Kan'ei-ji in the 1868 battle of Ueno, there were proposals to build a hospital on the temple's former grounds. However, Dutch physician A.F. Bauduin advocated preserving the site for its natural beauty, and so Ueno Park was established as Japan's first public park in 1873, while Kan'ei-ji was restored on a much shrunken grounds nearby.[1]

A grand reception for Ulysses S. Grant, held in 1879, was one of the first major public events held in the park. The park also served as the site for a number of major expositions and events, including the first three Domestic Industrial Expositions, held there in 1877, 1881, and 1890; the first modern museum-style exhibition of the works of Hokusai, in 1900; and the first Bunten (Ministry of Education Arts Salon) in 1907.

References

  1. Plaque on bust of Bauduin in Ueno Park.