Uji is a city in
Japan on the southern outskirts of
Kyoto, on the
Keihan[?] line or the
JR Nara line towards
Osaka. It has a population of 191,000 people, making it the largest city in the
Kyoto prefecture apart from Kyoto itself. The city sits on the Uji River ("Ujigawa"), which has its source in
Lake Biwa[?] ("Biwa-ko"). In the
4th century the son of Emperor Ojin established a palace in Uji.
Uji is famous in Japan for a number of reasons:
- it boasts an abundance of Shinto and Buddhist temples, all clustered about the centre of the town, including the Kosho-ji Zen temple, constructed in 1648, with its famous Kotozawa slope entrance (framed with dense thickets of peach, plum, willow, cherry, and maple trees, each of which dramatically change colour with the seasons). It also is home to Ujigami Jinja Shrine, another UNESCO World Heritage Site;
- it is the source of "Uji Tea", a form of very high quality Japanese tea. Shogun Yoshimitsu Ashikaga (1358-1408) promoted cultivation of green tea in the Uji area, and since that time Uji has been an important production and distribution centre of superior quality green tea (including Tsuen tea, continuously manufactured since 1160).
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