Jo-an explained

35.388°N 136.9424°W is a seventeenth-century Japanese teahouse (chashitsu) located in Inuyama, Aichi Prefecture. Jo-an is said to be one of the three finest teahouses in Japan and has been in its current location in Inuyama since 1972. It was designated a National Treasure in 1951.

History

Jo-an was originally built around 1618 in Kennin-ji, Kyoto, for Oda Urakusai, the younger brother of daimyō Oda Nobunaga and a disciple of tea ceremony master Sen no Rikyū.[1] [2] Jo-an has been relocated a number of times, but since 1972 has formed part of the Urakuen gardens in Inuyama, Aichi Prefecture, part of the historic Owari Province which the Oda clan ruled starting in the 15th century.[3] [4]

Architecture

Jo-an is approached through the roji ('dewy ground') garden. It consists of a chashitsu (tea room), a three tatami mat mizuya (preparation room), and a one-and-a-half tatami mat rōka no ma (corridor room). The chashitsu is composed of two and a half tatami mats, a daime (three quarter tatami mat), and a toko. The building has a shake roof and a nijiriguchi ('crawling-in entrance').[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 如庵 . Jo-an . The Agency for Cultural Affairs .
  2. Web site: 講談社 日本人名大辞典 - 織田有楽斎 . . 30 March 2011.
  3. Web site: Plan of Urakuen . Meitetsu Inuyama Hotel . 30 March 2011.
  4. Web site: Urakuen Japanese garden (National Treasure teahouse Joan) . . 30 March 2011.