Shōka-dō


The Shōka-dō is a hermitage built in the early Edo period, located in the city of Yawata, Kyoto, Japan. It was designated as a National Historic Site in 1957 under the name "Shōka-dō and its ruins" and its gardens were designated a National Place of Scenic Beauty under the name "Shōka-dō and Shoin Garden" the same year.

Overview

The Shōka-dō is a hermitage built in 1637 by Shōkadō Shōjō, a shrine priest of Iwashimizu Hachiman-gu and noted painter and literary figure in the early Edo period. He had entered the priesthood at the age of 17, became a master of Shingon Esoteric Buddhism, and attained the high rank of Ajari Hōin. At the eastern foot of Mount Otokoyama, where Iwashimizu Hachiman-gu is located, were numerous lodging houses which had been converted from chapels, and these were known as the "Otokoyama 48 temples". Shōkadō Shōjō inherited the lodging called "Takimoto-bō" and was visited there by many literary and artistic figures, including Kobori Enshū, Ishikawa Jōzan, Kinoshita Chōshōshi, Kogetsu Sōgan and Takuan Sōhō. In his later years, Shōkadō Shōjō constructed his hermitage within the nearby lodging house called "Izumo-bō". With the Shinbutsu bunri orders of the Meiji government in the mid-19th century, all of the lodging houses at Iwashimizu Hachiman-gu were abolished in 1868. The Shōka-dō building itself was relocated three times and is now south of its former location. It is a square structure with a dirt floor and thatch roof, and in appearance is a combination of a Buddhist temple and a teahouse.
It is currently a cultural facility called the Shokado Garden and Art Museum, managed and operated by the Yawata Citizens' Cultural Foundation. The gardens consist of the Outer Garden, containing 400 types of bamboo, three Japanese tea ceremony rooms, and the Annex of the Shokado Museum of Art, and the Inner Garden, containing the Shōka-dō structure itself, the Shoin, which was a structure built by Kobayakawa Hideaki, the Shokado Museum of Art, the Higashi Kurumazuka Kofun and the Kyoto Kitcho, a ryōtei famous for having invented the "Shōkadō bentō".
The gardens and museum are approximately an eight-minute walk from Yawatashi Station on the Keihan Electric Railway.

Shokado03s3000.jpg|Inner Garden(Shōka-dō)
Shokado08s3000.jpg|Outer Garden
Shokado07s3200.jpg|Bamboo in Outer Garden
松花堂 01.JPG|Japanese tea ceremony teahouse
Shokado05s3000.jpg|Shōkadō Art Museum