- en.m.wikipedia.org Rikugi-en GardensRikugi-en (六義園[1]) is a Tokyo metropolitan park in Bunkyō-ku. The name Rikugi-en means "Garden of the Six Principles", referring to the six elements in...
- gardeningcalendar.ca gardens/rikugi-en/Rikugi-en. One of the most beautiful gardens in Tokyo, the Rikugien offers a quiet resting and strolling place in the hectic Tokyo life.
- http://ageekinjapan.com rikugi-en-garden/We went to Komagome station and walking five minutes out of the station we arrived to Rikugi-en gardens (六義園 ,Google Maps).
- laughingwatersinc.com rikugi-end-gardenBuilt between 1695 and 1702, Rikugi-en is typical from the Edo Period and a wonderful example of a traditional Japanese garden.
- wa-pedia.com japan-guide/rikugien_gardens.shtmlThe Rikugi-en in Komagome is one of Tokyo's most beautiful gardens. The land was given by shōgun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi to his grand chamberlain...
- japanesegardens.jp gardens/famous/rikugien/Rikugi-en is one of Tokyo’s finest gardens and offers the visitor an ever-changing landscape.
- klook.com en-AU/activity/98873-rikugien-garden/Since its construction, Rikugi-en Garden has been counted as one of the two great gardens of Edo along with Koishikawa Korakuen Garden.
- linkedin.com pulse/rikugi-en-gardens-tokyo-one-…Rikugi-en , or Garden of the Six Principles of Poetry, is a three dimensional garden of a narrative design based on the six elements in waka Japanese poetry.
- iqvel.com en/a/Japan/Rikugi-en-GardensThe Rikugi-en Gardens – is a magnificent garden that is located in Tokyo, namely one of its areas called Bunko. It refers to the Edo period, which falls on 1702.
- fareastnet.wordpress.com 2013/09/21/1/Rikugi-en Garden is the metropolitan garden which was a suburban residence of a daimyo, Yoshiyasu Yanagisawa.