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Myokian Temple Tea House
Myokian Temple Tea House
 
Myokian Temple Tea House
Myokian Temple Tea House
 
Myokian Temple Tea House
Myokian Temple Tea House
 

Myokian Temple Tea House

JAPAN, Kyoto
This tea house at Myokian Temple was built during the Azuchi-Momoyama period (1573–1615) by Sen no Rikyu, founder of the Japanese tea ceremony, under the instruction of General Toyotomi Hideyoshi. It was listed as a National Treasure in 1951.
  The construction of tea houses originates from the tradition of tea-drinking among Zen Buddhist monks. This tea house has a single-eave hip-and-gable roof covered with cypress bark. The overhanging eaves are half the width of the room. There are stepping-stones that lead to the entrance. The low entrance means that the visitor has to bow down in respect for the tea ceremony host. This tea house has a rustic simplicity: its walls are made of clay mixed with straw, the window frames are formed from bamboo, the columns consist of plain wood, and the roof structure is exposed. There is a hanging scroll in the alcove inside the room.
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