1   KAIYU  (Stroll Garden)

Across  the little stone bridge you enter the woodland part of the garden.  This is a Stroll Garden, developed in the 17th century to combine the three basic Japanese styles.... the Water and Rock garden, the Zen Garden, and the Tea Garden.
A Japanese Lantern, Kakudai Kaku, stands just over the bridge to light your way.
5  ROJI  (Tea Garden)

Rikkyu (1521-1591) developed the roji - a garden of paths lanterns and gravel, around the Tea House, a reconstruction of a hermit's cottage, where the ceremony of Tea had been held since the 15th century.  The Buddhist monks had evolved the Tea Ceremony as a ritual to cleanse the mind and evoke inner peace.
This Tea Garden has a well, (where the Tea Master would get water for the making of tea), a waiting bench (KOSHIKAKE) where guests would wait until greeted by the host, and a TSUKUBAI (water basin) where guests would wash their hands prior to the ceremony. The TeaHouse itself has maintained its simple style of wood and thatch, with plain plastered walls, sparse furnishing, and floor matting.
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