Eight Bridges
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Eight Bridges (Japanese: 八橋; Romaji: ''Yatsuhashi'') is a design of Japanese bridge that consists of eight overlapping wooden or stone planks. Its eight-part construction was first mentioned in '' The Tales of Ise'', written during the Heian Period, and was for many centuries a well known literary motif in Japan. Over time the motif (which became stylised into a zig-zag shape), was incorporated into a large range of art forms: it could be found on kimonos, writing boxes, screens and porcelain, and in '' ukiyo-e'' prints and garden landscapes. The specific form of the eight-plank bridge was subsequently utilised by artists and designers around the globe, by which time it had become dislocated from its origins in '' The Tales of Ise'' and literary allusion.


Literary origins

The Eight Bridges originates from '' The Tales of Ise'' – a collection of episodes, sometimes attributed to the poet Ariwara no Narihara (825–880), about the life of an unidentified man in the capital and his journey into Eastern Japan. In Mikawa, the man and his companions stop to rest beside the Eight Bridges which fords eight channels that run through a marsh filled with irises: There is little description of the shape of the Eight Bridges in ''The Tales of Ise'', and it is unclear how it became specifically associated with the zig-zag shape.


In Japanese literature

The Eight Bridges is an '' utamakura'' (poem-pillow), or famous place that is repeatedly referred to in literature. Travellers would seek out the Eight Bridges and would often record their response to the place with a poem. Numerous references to the Eight Bridges can be seen in Japanese literature, as in '' Sarashina Diary'', '' The Tale of the Heike'' and ''The Tale of Chikusai'': 1. ''Sarashina Diary'' was written by the daughter of Sugawara no Takasue, most likely in her fifties, recounting a journey she took from the capital to Kazusa in 1020, when she was a twelve-year-old girl. In this journey she passed several famous sites including the Eight Bridges (''Yatsuhashi''), which she found disappointing: 2. ''The Tale of the Heike'' is an epic about the power struggle between the Heike and Genji clans that marked the start of the
Kamakura period The is a period of Japanese history that marks the governance by the Kamakura shogunate, officially established in 1192 in Kamakura by the first ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo after the conclusion of the Genpei War, which saw the struggle betwee ...
(1185–1333). ''The Tale of Heike'' directly references the Eight Bridges' origin by mentioning the poet Narihara (to whom ''The Tales of Ise'' is attributed) and by also using the simile of the spider's legs: 3. ''The Tale of Chikusai'', published around 1624, recounts Chikusai and his manservant's journeys from Edo to Kyoto. Although the Eight Bridges was long gone by the time Chikusai visits, he still claims to be able to see its foundations, highlighting the importance of mythology over actuality when visiting ''utamakura'':


In Japanese visual arts

The Eight Bridges design was gradually incorporated into a large range of Japanese arts and craft, as the literary allusion became a specific motif. It can be found on screens, writing boxes and kimonos. The famous ''Irises at Yatsuhashi'' pair of six-panel folding screens by Ogata Kōrin depicts the Eight Bridges design running, between clumps of blue irises, diagonally across the screens against a background of gold leaf. A writing box, also made by Ogata Kōrin in the 18th century, depicts the Eight Bridges running through golden reeds with mother-of-pearl irises and is designated a Japanese national treasure. The screen and writing box were both luxury items, but the Eight Bridges motif can also be found on more affordable items, such as prints and kimonos. Katsushika Hokusai's print ''Ancient View of Yatsuhashi in Mikawa Province'', part of his ''Remarkable Views of Famous Bridges in Various Provinces'' series, shows numerous people using the Eight Bridges to cross a swamp of irises. The pattern book ''Onhiinagata'' (1666) contains a design for a kimono with the Eight Bridges motif running diagonally across the back, beside irises. Initially this literary motif as applied to arts and crafts was confined to goods used by the elite of Japanese society, but during the Edo period it became known and used by ordinary people.


In gardens

Actual or physical bridges composed of eight segments can be found in Japanese gardens both inside and outside of Japan. The bridge consists of eight wooden or stone planks arranged in a zig-zag pattern, atop piles of wood or stakes. The winding zig-zag pattern promotes a slow crossing that allows different vistas to be admired. Eight Bridges structures are often found near irises, as the original was in ''The Tales of Ise''. Eight Bridges structures can be found in gardens around Japan, including
Koishikawa-Kōrakuen The is a large urban park in the Koishikawa neighborhood of Bunkyō, Tokyo, Japan. The Japanese garden dates from the early Edo period. and is one of three surviving ''daimyō'' gardens of the many that were created during that period, the ...
in Tokyo, Kōraku-en in
Okayama is the capital city of Okayama Prefecture in the Chūgoku region of Japan. The city was founded on June 1, 1889. , the city has an estimated population of 720,841 and a population density of 910 persons per km2. The total area is . The city is ...
, and Oyama Shrine garden in Kanazawa.


Outside Japan

Eight Bridges structures can also be found outside of Japan, in places including the Missouri Botanical Garden in the United States, the Jardín Japonés in Argentina, and the '' Sha-rak-uen'', or "place of pleasure and delight", built in 1907 at Cowden Castle in Scotland. The latter garden was commissioned by
Ella Christie Isabella "Ella" Robertson Christie (21 April 1861 - 29 January 1949) was a pioneering Scottish traveller and explorer, landowner, gardener and author. Early life Christie was born on 21 April 1861 at Millbank in Cockpen, near Bonnyrigg, to A ...
, after returning from a trip to Japan, and the process was overseen by Taki Handa. The garden was praised by Professor Jijo Suzuji, the Eighteenth Hereditary Head of the Soami School of Imperial Design, with the only flaw being the straight bridge, so it was replaced with an Eight Bridges structure.


References

{{reflist Japanese architectural styles Japanese literature