Meiji-Jingū (Meiji Shrine) details
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Phone
3379 5511
- Website
- Transport
underground rail: JR Yamanote Line to Harajuku (Omote-sandō exit) or Chiyoda Line to Meiji-Jingūmae (exit 3)
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Lonely Planet review
Tokyo's grandest Shintō shrine, this 1920 edifice enshrines the Emperor Meiji and Empress Shōken, under whose rule Japan ended its isolation from the outside world. Destroyed in WWII bombings and reconstructed in 1958, the shrine buildings occupy just a corner of the precinct's 70 forested hectares (175 acres). In fact, its 100,000 trees are said to have been donated by 100,000 visitors from all over Japan.
Meiji-jingū might be a reconstruction of the original but, unlike so many of Japan's postwar reconstructions, it is altogether authentic. The main structure was built with prized hinoki cypress from the Kiso region of Nagano prefecture, while the cypress for the huge torii (gate) was imported from Alishan in Taiwan. If you're there when a wedding is in progress, the procession is pure photographic gold.
The grounds are also home to the Meiji-jingū Gyōen (admission around ¥500 from to ), a lovely strolling garden. Once the property of two daimyō families, after it came under imperial control, Meiji himself designed the garden as a gift to the Empress Shōken. There are peaceful walks to the pond and teahouse and a good dose of privacy on weekdays, and spectacular irises and satsuki azaleas in season.
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