SakyÅ-ku, Kyoto


SakyÅ-ku (左京区 SakyÅ-ku) is one of the eleven wards in the city of Kyoto, in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. It was created in 1929 when it was split off from Kamigyo-ku.
It is located in the north-east corner of Kyoto city. In the east it borders the city of ÅŒtsu in Shiga Prefecture. In the south SanjÅ Street separates it from Higashiyama-ku and Yamashina-ku. In the north it borders the city of Nantan in Kyoto Prefecture and Takashima in Shiga Prefecture. In central Kyoto, the Kamo River flows on the western border of this ward.
In the southern part there are many residential areas and schools. For example, the main campus of Kyoto University is located here, as is Kyoto Institute of Technology and Kyoto Seika University. Areas like Iwakura have been designated urbanization control areas, where large-scale exploitation and erection of tall buildings is restricted. Many rice fields remain in this area. The northern part of SakyÅ-ku is mountainous and has a thriving forest industry.
The large streets Kawabata, HigashiÅji and Shirakawa run from south to north. The train station Demachiyanagi is the terminal for both the Keihan railway with trains running south to Osaka, and the Eizan railway running north to Yase and Kurama.
Famous places located inside SakyÅ-ku include Ginkaku-ji, Nanzen-ji, Kamigamo Jinja and Heian-jingu. In the northern parts are Kuramadera, Kifunejinja, Sanzen'in, the ruins of a house where Iwakura Tomomi was imprisoned, the Shugakuin Imperial Villa and Manshuin Temple, and the Kyoto International Conference Hall where the Kyoto Protocol was adopted. SakyÅ-ku also contains the Kyoto Botanical Garden and several of the mountains lit up during the yearly Gozan no Okuribi festival, including the main Daimonji-yama.
The meaning of sakyÅ (左京) is "on the Emperor's left." When residing in the Imperial Palace the Emperor would sit facing south, thus the eastern direction would be to his left. Similarly, there is a ward to the west called Ukyo-ku (å³äº¬åŒº), meaning "the ward on the Emperor's right." In old times, sakyÅ was referring to the eastern part of the capital, but the present SakyÅ-ku is bounded to the west by the Kamo River, and is thus outside the historical capital.
Education
The Kyoto Korean Junior High-High School, a North Korean school, is in the ward.[1]
References
- ↑ Home page. Kyoto Korean Junior High-High School. Retrieved on 14 October 2015. "京都æœé®®ä¸é«˜ç´šå¦æ ¡ 〒606-8282 京都府京都市左京区北白å·å¤–山町1"
External links
Media related to SakyÅ-ku, Kyoto at Wikimedia Commons
- The ward's official homepage (Japanese)
- Government of Japan Ministry of the Environment article on Kyoto Protocol (retrieved February 8, 2007)
- Pool of photographs taken in Sakyo-ku on Flickr (retrieved March 9, 2010)
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Coordinates: 35°1′33″N 135°46′31″E / 35.02583°N 135.77528°E
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