Ueno Park
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Template:Nihongo is a spacious public park in the Ueno district of Taitō, Tokyo, Japan. The park was established in 1873 on lands formerly belonging to the temple of Kan'ei-ji. Amongst the country's first public parks, it was founded following the Western example as part of the borrowing and assimilation of international practices that characterizes the early Meiji period. The home of a number of major museums, Ueno Park is also celebrated in spring for its cherry blossoms and hanami. In recent times the park and its attractions have drawn over ten million visitors a year, making it Japan's most popular city park.<ref name="Parkscapes">Template:Cite book</ref>
History
Ueno Park occupies land once belonging to Kan'ei-ji, founded in 1625 in the "demon gate", the unlucky direction to the northeast of Edo Castle.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Most of the temple buildings were destroyed in the Battle of Ueno in 1868 during the Boshin War, when the forces of the Tokugawa shogunate were defeated by those aiming at the restoration of imperial rule. In December of that year Ueno Hill became the property of the city of Tokyo, other than for the surviving temple buildings which include the five-storey pagoda of 1639, the Kiyomizu Kannondō (or Shimizudō) of 1631, and approximately coeval main gate (all designated as Important Cultural Properties of Japan).<ref name="Parkscapes"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Various proposals were put forward for the use of the site as a medical school or hospital, but Dutch doctor Bauduin urged instead that the area be turned into a park.<ref name=Bauduin>Template:Cite book</ref> In January 1873 the Dajō-kan issued a notice providing for the establishment of public parks, noting that "in prefectures including Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto, there are places of historic interest, scenic beauty, and recreation and relaxation where people can visit and enjoy themselves, for example Sensō-ji and Kan'ei-ji..."<ref name="Diet">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This was the year after the foundation of Yellowstone, the world's first national park.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Later that year Ueno Park was established, alongside Shiba, Asakusa, Asukayama, and Fukugawa Parks.<ref name=Bauduin/><ref name="Metro">Template:Cite web</ref> It was administered first by the Home Ministry's Museum Bureau, then by the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, before passing to the Ministry of the Imperial Household. In 1924, in honour of the marriage of Hirohito, Ueno Park was presented to the city by Emperor Taishō, receiving the official name that lasts to this day of Template:Nihongo, lit. "Ueno Imperial Gift Park".<ref name="Diet"/>
Natural features
The park has some 8,800 trees, including Ginkgo biloba, Cinnamomum camphora, Zelkova serrata, Formosan cherry, Somei-Yoshino cherry, and Japanese cherry. There is a further Template:Cvt of shrubs.<ref name="Basic Info"/> Shinobazu Pond is a small lake with an area of Template:Cvt, extensive lotus beds, and marshland. It provides an important wintering ground for birds. Species commonly found include the tufted duck, Eurasian wigeon, northern pintail, common pochard, little grebe, great egret, and great cormorant. The Baer's pochard, ring-necked duck, and American wigeon have also been recorded.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The central island houses a shrine to Benzaiten, goddess of fortune, modelled on Chikubu Island in Lake Biwa.<ref name="Jinnai">Template:Cite book</ref> The area was once full of "rendezvous teahouses", equivalent of the modern love hotel.<ref name="Jinnai"/> After the Pacific War the pond was drained and used for the cultivation of cereals and subsequently there were plans to turn the site into a baseball stadium or multi-storey carpark.<ref name="Seidensticker">Template:Cite book</ref> The lotus pond was restored in 1949, although much of it was again accidentally drained in 1968 during work on a new subway line.<ref name="Seidensticker"/>
In all there are some 800 cherry trees in the park, although with the inclusion of those belonging to the Ueno Tōshō-gū shrine, temple buildings, and other neighbouring points the total reaches some twelve hundred.<ref name="Metro"/> Inspired, Matsuo Bashō wrote "cloud of blossoms - is the temple bell from Ueno or Asakusa".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Cultural facilities
Ueno Park is home to a number of museums. The very words in Japanese for museum as well as for art were coined in the Meiji period (from 1868) to capture Western concepts after the Iwakura Mission and other early visits to North America and Europe.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Tokyo National Museum was founded in 1872 after the first exhibition by the Museum Department of the new Ministry of Education.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the same year the Ministry of Education Museum opened, now the National Museum of Nature and Science.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The National Museum of Western Art was founded in 1959 based on the collection of the industrialist (Kawasaki group) Matsukata Kōjirō; the collection was left in storage in France by Matsukata and it was returned by the French government in 1959 after the Treaty of San Francisco.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The building is by Le Corbusier who used it to express his concept of the Museum of Unlimited Growth, based on an expanding spiral.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It has been nominated for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Other museums include the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, dating back to 1926, and Shitamachi Museum of 1980, which is dedicated to the culture of the "Low City".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The park was also chosen as home for the Japan Academy (1879), Tokyo School of Fine Arts (1889), and Tokyo School of Music (1890).<ref name="Parkscapes"/>
The first western-style concert hall in the country, the Sōgakudō Concert Hall of 1890 (ICP) was donated to the ward in 1983 and reconstructed on another site in the park, where it is used for concerts.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Tokyo Bunka Kaikan opened in 1961 as a venue for opera and ballet, in celebration of the five hundredth anniversary of the foundation of the city of Edo.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The Imperial Library was established as the national library in 1872 and opened in Ueno Park in 1906; the National Diet Library opened in Chiyoda in 1948 and the building now houses the International Library of Children's Literature.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Other landmarks
Tokugawa Ieyasu is enshrined at Ueno Tōshō-gū, dating to 1651.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Flame of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Memorial: On the right of the alley leading North to Tokugawa Ieyasu Tōshō-gū shrine is a grey stone memorial with a permanently burning flame in memory of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki of August 1945 at the end of World War II. This Flame of Hiroshima and Nagasaki memorial was initiated in Hiroshima shortly after the nuclear bombings by Mr. Tatsuo Yamamoto (1916–2004), from the town of Hoshino. This flame was later merged with a flame started in Nagasaki. In 1968 members of the Tokyo's Shitamachi People Association put forward the idea of lighting the flame at the precinct of Tosho-gu shrine in Tokyo's Ueno Park. In April 1989, an "Association for the Flame of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Lit at Ueno Toshogu" was founded and tens of thousands of people took part in the fundraising for over one year. The construction of the monument was completed on July 21, 1990. The dedication carved into the memorial stone states that "We, hereby pledge to keep burning the A-bomb flame, convinced that this monument will contribute to strengthening the worldwide people's movement to abolish nuclear weapons and achieve peace, which is the most urgent task for the people across the borders".
Gojōten Jinja is dedicated to scholar Sugawara no Michizane, while neighbouring Hanazono Inari Jinja has red-bibbed Inari fox statues in an atmospheric grotto.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There is a Yayoi-period burial mound on a small hill near the park's centre.<ref name="Metro"/> For a decade until 1894 there was horse racing near Shinobazu Pond.<ref name=Bauduin/><ref name="Diet"/> Nowadays there is a baseball field, named in honour of poet Masaoka Shiki, fan of the sport.<ref name="Metro"/> As well as the first art museum in Japan, the park had the first zoo, first tram, first May Day celebrations (in 1920), and staged a number of industrial expositions.<ref name="Bauduin"/><ref name="Diet"/> Ueno Station opened nearby in 1883.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> After the Great Kantō earthquake in 1923, notices of missing persons were attached to the statue of Saigō Takamori.<ref name="Diet"/> Ueno Park and its surroundings figure prominently in Japanese fiction, including The Wild Geese by Mori Ōgai.
One of the lanterns that is present at the park is a stone lantern that was one of two carved in 1651 to memorialize Tokugawa Iemitsu. Both lanterns stood at the park until the governor of Tokyo gifted one of them in 1954 to the city of Washington, D.C., to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Commodore Matthew C. Perry's signing of the 1854 Japan-US Treaty of Amity and Friendship. The lantern brought to Washington is known as the Japanese Lantern and currently resides in West Potomac Park among a number of cherry trees, the first of which were gifted by Tokyo mayor Yukio Ozaki in 1912. For over 50 years, the lighting of the lantern by the Embassy of Japan’s appointed Cherry Blossom Princess has opened the United States' annual National Cherry Blossom Festival.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Education
Taito City Board of Education operates public elementary and junior high schools.
Uenokoen 1-11-ban are zoned to Shinobugaoka Elementary School (忍岡小学校), while 12-18-ban are zoned to Negishi Elementary School (根岸小学校).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Part of Uenokoen (1-14 ban and parts of 15-17 ban) is zoned to Ueno Junior High School (上野中学校), while another part (18-ban and the rest of 15-17 ban) is zoned to Shinobugaoka Junior High School (忍岡中学校).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Squatting
Many homeless people squat in Ueno Park. Found among the park's treelines and wooded areas, homeless camps border on the size of small villages, with an internal structure, culture, and support system. The long-term shelters are typically constructed of cardboard covered with blue tarps. The police occasionally tear down the camps and drive out or arrest the homeless, who return as soon as they can. While squatting is illegal in Japan, homelessness is seen as an endemic problem in Tokyo and other cities, and the presence of squatters is accepted as an inevitability.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Access
- From the east (convenient access to the main park and most museums):
- From the southeast (convenient access to the main park and Shinobazu Pond):
- From the southwest (convenient access to Shinobazu Pond):
- From the northwest (convenient access to Shinobazu Pond and Ueno Zoo):
- From the north (convenient access to the Tokyo National Museum):
Gallery of main attractions
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The University Art Museum, Tokyo University of the Arts
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Ueno Royal Museum
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Kan'ei-ji Hondō
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Tokugawa mausoleum
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Gojōten Jinja (Hanazono Inari Jinja)
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Statue of Saigō Takamori walking his dog
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Equestrian statue of Prince Komatsu Akihito
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Statue of Hideyo Noguchi
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Remains of the Ueno Daibutsu
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Monument to the Shōgitai
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Monument to Ulysses Grant
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Kuroda Memorial Hall, National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Tokyo