| UNESCO World
Heritage Sites:
Japan (1) |
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The World Heritage Sites presented here are provided to illustrate the places in a country that are regarded as "world treasures"; these are the sites that
countries feel best represent their heritage and place in world history. The
World Heritage Site may represent either a cultural or a natural treasure. We
provide them to you in the belief that they reveal the "best of the best" and
should be considered for visits by all travelers.
Complete descriptions of the UNESCO World Heritage
Sites can be found at the UNESCO world heritage site http://whc.unesco.org.
We urge you to visit the site and support UNESCO's and individual
countries efforts to preserve World Heritage Sites.
Buddhist Monuments in the Horyu-ji Area
There are around 48 Buddhist monuments in the Horyu-ji area, in Nara
Prefecture. Several date from the late 7th or early 8th century, making them
some of the oldest surviving wooden buildings in the world. These masterpieces
of wooden architecture are important not only for the history of art, since
they illustrate the adaptation of Chinese Buddhist architecture and layout to
Japanese culture, but also for the history of religion, since their
construction coincided with the introduction of Buddhism to Japan from China
by way of the Korean peninsula.
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Himeji-jo
Himeji-jo is the finest surviving example of early 17th-century Japanese
castle architecture, comprising 83 buildings with highly developed systems
of defence and ingenious protection devices dating from the beginning of
the Shogun period. It is a masterpiece of construction in wood, combining
function with aesthetic appeal, both in its elegant appearance unified by
the white plastered earthen walls and in the subtlety of the relationships
between the building masses and the multiple roof layers.
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Yakushima
Located in the interior of Yaku Island, at the meeting-point of the
palaearctic and oriental biotic regions, Yakushima exhibits a rich flora,
with some 1,900 species and subspecies, including ancient specimens of the
sugi (Japanese cedar). It also contains a remnant of a warm-temperate
ancient forest that is unique in this region.
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Shirakami-Sanchi
Situated in the mountains of northern Honshu, this trackless site includes
the last virgin remains of the cool-temperate forest of Siebold's beech
trees that once covered the hills and mountain slopes of northern Japan.
The black bear, the serow and 87 species of birds can be found in this
forest.
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Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu
Cities
Built in A.D. 794 on the model of the capitals of ancient China, Kyoto was
the imperial capital of Japan from its foundation until the middle of the
19th century. As the centre of Japanese culture for more than 1,000 years,
Kyoto illustrates the development of Japanese wooden architecture,
particularly religious architecture, and the art of Japanese gardens,
which has influenced landscape gardening the world over.
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Historic Villages of Shirakawa-go and Gokayama
Located in a mountainous region that was cut off from the rest of the
world for a long period of time, these villages with their Gassho-style
houses subsisted on the cultivation of mulberry trees and the rearing of
silkworms. The large houses with their steeply pitched thatched roofs are
the only examples of their kind in Japan. Despite economic upheavals, the
villages of Ogimachi, Ainokura and Suganuma are outstanding examples of a
traditional way of life perfectly adapted to the environment and people's
social and economic circumstances.
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