Skip to main content

JAANUS

  • b (1)
  • c (5)
  • d (4)
  • f (1)
  • g (3)
  • h (3)
  • i (1)
  • j (4)
  • k (6)
  • m (6)
  • n (1)
  • o (9)
  • r (1)
  • s (8)
  • t (3)
  • u (2)
  • w (3)
  • y (4)
  • z (1)
  • (-) Aristocratic Dwellings (9)
  • Architecture (9)
  • Folk Dwellings (2)
  • General Terms (1)
  • Tea Houses (1)

Displaying 1 - 9 of 9
Title Contains Image(s) Description Keywords
miaraka 御殿

Also written 御舎. The emperor's palace or dwellings of the upper class in the proto-historic and early historic periods. The…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
mihashi 御階

The term for steps constructed at the center front of two important imperial palace buildings in Kyoto Gosho 京都御所, the…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
mikawamizu 御溝水

Also mikawa 御溝. Ditches surrounding each building in the Imperial Palace. The present palace, Kyoto Gosho 京都御所, has…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
misubusuma 御簾襖

A variation on the usual style of opaque sliding partitioning screen *fusuma …

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
mizushidokoro 御厨子所

1 A part of the emperor's residential compound Dairi 内裏 in the Imperial Palace, Kyoto Gosho 京都御所. The…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
mushamado 武者窓 ✓

Also bukemado 武家窓, bugyōmado 奉行窓. Edo period windows with heavy vertical lattice bars, used in castle…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings, Folk Dwellings
takudana 卓棚

A set of decorative shelves used in an alcove. A single, high shelf with enclosed sliding doors is constructed slightly…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings
tana 棚

Shelves.

1  A type of shelf, sometimes with a rack, of which there are many ordinary household…

Architecture, General Terms, Aristocratic Dwellings, Tea Houses, Folk Dwellings
tsukebashira 付柱

Also kobashira 小柱 or shoinbashira 書院柱. A post placed at the exterior corner of the alcove that…

Architecture, Aristocratic Dwellings

Contributor Login

JAANUS is the on-line Dictionary of Japanese Architectural and Art Historical Terminology compiled by Dr. Mary Neighbour Parent.

Originally built by the Atsumi International Scholarship Foundation, it is now hosted and maintained by the Media Center for Art History at Columbia University