Middle Garden (Naka Shin’en)

Meiji period

This article can be read in about 2 minutes.

中神苑

A poem for the pond
woven by an old bridge and blooming flowers

The Middle Garden, or Naka Shin’en, is one of the original gardens opened to the public with the shrine in 1895. It was landscaped by Ogawa Jihei VII, a master gardener of the Meiji era (1868–1912), known for his skillful use of rocks and water. It is a pond garden, slightly larger and more open than the West Garden (Nishi Shin’en), which he also created for the shrine’s opening.

The Middle Garden is inspired by the Muromachi period (1336–1573). In this period, Zen Buddhism flourished, and exerted a strong influence on the development of Noh drama, the tea ceremony, landscape gardening, and flower arranging.

The garden is airy and open, and a hut along the path serves tea. The garden embodies the wabi-sabi aesthetic, the simple beauty found in imperfection and impermanence that is valued in tea ceremony and other traditional arts.

Stepping-stones traverse the pond and are an entertaining feature of the garden that allows for views from the water and from varying angles. The stones differ in height, shape, and size, and follow a playful winding path.

The pond, Soryu-ike, shares its name with the tower on the eastern side of the shrine courtyard, Soryuro Tower. Both are named after the Azure Dragon of the East, one of the celestial guardians in ancient Chinese geomancy.

Flowers in the garden include azalea, water lily, golden lace (ominaeshi; Patrinia scabiosifolia), and rabbit-ear iris (kakitsubata; Iris laevigata).

MOVIE

Experience the video to get one step closer.

This video, accompanied by narration, introduces the charms of Middle Garden (Naka Shin’en) . Experience its charms even more deeply through the video.

Duration: (audio included)

View video guide

Please respond to our questionnaire.

Estimated length: 30 seconds

Questionnaire

Please rate this cultural heritage introduction page (Total of 4 questions)

1/4

Audio Guide

0:00 0:00