Ichiriki Chaya

(Redirected from Ichiriki Tei)

35°00′13″N 135°46′30″E / 35.003496°N 135.775051°E / 35.003496; 135.775051

The entrance of the Ichiriki

The Ichiriki Teahouse (一力茶屋, Ichiriki Chaya), formerly Ichiriki Mansion (一力亭, Ichiriki-tei), is an historic ochaya ("tea house") in Kyoto, Japan. It is located at the southeast corner of Shijō Street and Hanami Lane, its entrance right at the heart of the Gion Kobu district.

It is considered an exclusive and high-end establishment; access is invitation only while its fame is often associated with the Chushingura event. The 9th teahouse proprietor is Jirou-emon Sugiura.

History

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The Ichiriki is more than 300 years old, and has been a major centerpiece of Gion since the beginning of the entertainment district. Like other ochaya in Gion, the Ichiriki is used to hold parties (ozashiki) by geisha, the Ichiriki in particular having traditionally entertained men of political and business power.

The house is run by the Sugiura (杉浦) family, and the nameplate on the entrance gate reads Sugiura Jirou(u)emon (杉浦治郎右衛門),[a] the name of the 9th generation head.[1]

Name

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The noren curtains at the entrance feature the characters ichi (, "one") and riki (, "strength") printed in black on a dark red ground, arranged to resemble the character man (, "myriad, ten thousand"). It is said that the establishment was originally called yorozuya (万屋, general store), but in the play Kanadehon Chūshingura (仮名手本忠臣蔵) (a telling of the story of the forty-seven rōnin, based on events at the house), the name was changed by splitting the character into and , disguising the name. Due to the play being a major success, this was then adopted by the house itself, yielding the present name.[1]

The forty-seven rōnin

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The Ichiriki plays a part in the events of the Akō vendetta, an 18th century historical event described by some scholars as a Japanese "national legend".[2] A group of samurai became masterless (rōnin) following the ritual suicide of their daimyō, who was sentenced to death for the crime of drawing a sword and injuring a man in the Imperial Palace. Kira Yoshinaka had made a series of verbal insults towards the samurai's master, inciting his attack, but was left unpunished; as a result of this, the masterless samurai plotted to assassinate Yoshinaka for over two years.

The samurai, led by Oishi Kuranosuke, realized they would be monitored for signs they were planning to enact revenge. Thus, in an effort to dissuade the suspecting parties and Imperial spies, they sent Kuranosuke to Kyoto, who spent many nights at the Ichiriki earning a reputation as a gambler and a drunkard.[3] As Kuranosuke gave the appearance of becoming more and more relaxed and unprepared, Kira became less active in his suspicions and eventually relaxed his security. Because the Ichiriki provided the cover to mount an attack, the samurai were eventually successful in killing Yoshinaka, but were then forced to commit suicide themselves.

This story has been retold numerous times, a genre known as Chūshingura, which has served to increase the fame of the Ichiriki.

The fall of the shōgun

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As modernisation spread through Japan during the final years of the Edo period, unrest also spread within the country, with the age of the shōgun coming to an end; a number of murders of foreigners had led to tension rising between Japan and the Western powers, and this international pressure led many to question the legitimacy of the shōgun's rule.[4]

Much of the plotting to overthrow the shogunate took place in secretive talks at the Ichiriki, disguised as innocent evenings with friends.[5] The plans came to fruition in 1868 when the last shōgun agreed to dissolve the shogunate at Nijō Castle.[5]

Access

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Access to the Ichiriki is the height of exclusivity; fierce ties to the teahouse must first be established before one can become a patron. Relationships to the teahouse can often be traced back generations, with only these patrons and their guests allowed in.[6]

For a brief period of only a few nights in 2006, the Ichiriki, along with five other teahouses in Gion – one from each of the five Kyoto geisha districts – offered general access to a small number of tourists who were unaccompanied by patrons, as part of a tourism promotion program at the request of the Kyoto City Tourist Association.[7]

Services offered

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The entrance to the Ichiriki

The Ichiriki offers similar services to the other ochaya in Kyoto, with maiko and geisha hired from a geisha house (okiya) to provide entertainment and conversation to guests at parties.[6] The Ichiriki does not prepare food, but customers can order catering à la carte, which is delivered to the house.[1] Guests can also be shown around the house and see various decorations, such as a miniature display of the forty-seven rōnin dating to around 1850.[6]

Architecture

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The Ichiriki is structured in the style of traditional Japanese architecture. The structure of the building is mostly wood, and is designed to protect the privacy of its patrons, with the interior gardens not visible from outside the complex. The building also features angled screens to prevent eavesdropping at walls.[3]

Cultural references to the Ichiriki

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  • The establishment is a major setting in Arthur Golden's fictional portrayal of a Gion geisha's life in Memoirs of a Geisha, though Golden himself never visited the teahouse.[6]
  • The Ichiriki is a major setting in the bunraku play Kanadehon Chūshingura, depicting the story of the forty-seven rōnin.[8][9]
  • The play Ichiriki Teahouse centers around the plots against the shōgun formulated at the Ichiriki.[10]
  • Former geisha Sayo Masuda mentions it several times in her work Autobiography of a Geisha,[11] stating that "The Mistress of the Ichiriki was only thirty-four or thirty-five, but she once had been a geisha herself and had suffered terribly to get where she was, so she was kind to us in all sort of ways".

Notes

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  1. ^ The reading of 治郎右衛門 is ambiguous.

References

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  1. ^ a b c 祇園一力亭 (Gion Ichiriki-tei) (in Japanese)
  2. ^ "Kanadehon". Columbia University.
  3. ^ a b ""Ichiriki Ochaya." Japan Travel Guide. Ed. Declan Murphy. Hattori Foundation". www.yamasa.org. 8 July 2008. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  4. ^ "The Overthrow of the Shogun 1867." Bigpond. Historical Foundation of Japan's Military Aggression. 8 July 2008
  5. ^ a b Martin, John H., and Phyllis G. Martin. Kyoto: A Cultural Guide. North Clarendon: Tuttle, 2002.
  6. ^ a b c d Burgess, Steve (13 June 2001). "The powder puff girls". Salon. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  7. ^ "Exclusive Kyoto Teahouses Open Doors to Tourists." Yomiuri Shimbun [Tokyo] 30 Jan. 2006
  8. ^ "ICHIRIKI TEAHOUSE". park.org.
  9. ^ Bell, David. Chushingura and the Floating World: The Representation of Kanadehon Chushingura in Ukiyo-e Prints. New York: Rutledge, 2001.
  10. ^ "Strock, Owen. Japanese Visual Culture. Middlebury U. 8 July 2008". Archived from the original on 11 July 2007. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  11. ^ Masuda, Sayo (2003). Autobiography of a Geisha. Columbia University Press.
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