Kyoto

Save

Introducing Kyoto

Kyoto is the storehouse of Japan’s traditional culture and the stage on which much of Japanese history was played out. With 17 Unesco World Heritage sites, more than 1600 Buddhist temples and over 400 Shintō shrines, Kyoto is also one of the world’s most culturally rich cities. Indeed, it is fair to say that Kyoto ranks with Paris, London and Rome as one of those cities that everyone should see at least once in their lives. And, needless to say, it should rank near the top of any Japan itinerary.

Kyoto is where you will find the Japan of your imagination: raked pebble gardens, poets’ huts hidden amid bamboo groves, arcades of vermilion shrine gates, geisha disappearing into the doorways of traditional restaurants, golden temples floating above tranquil waters. Indeed, most of the sites that make up the popular image of Japan probably originated in Kyoto.

Show full overview

Advertisement

Advertisement

Tunnel of torii gates with inscriptions at Fushimi Inari Shrine.
View gallery

Tunnel of torii gates with inscriptions at Fushimi Inari Shrine.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Rachel Lewis
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Bamboo forest walkway, Arashiyama district.
  • School girl posing for the camera.
  • Geisha checking photos on digital camera.
  • Temple roof detail through trees.
  • Kinkakuji Temple, Kinkaku (Golden Pavilion)
  • Prince Planet figure, Kyoto Station.
View gallery