Nomura Samurai House & Garden — Edo Period Residence
The Nomura Samurai House (武家屋敷跡 野村家, Nomura-ke) in the Nagamachi district is the finest preserved samurai residence in Kanazawa, showcasing the lifestyle of a mid-ranking samurai family during the Edo Period. The house was meticulously restored in the 1970s using original materials — cypress wood ceilings, intricate ranma (transoms with carved decorations), shoji screens, and tatami rooms arranged according to strict samurai architectural codes. The residence displays samurai armor, swords, tea ceremony utensils, and personal items of the Nomura family who served the Maeda clan for generations.
The house's highlight is its courtyard garden (日本庭園) — consistently ranked among Japan's top private gardens despite its compact size (approximately 30 square meters). The garden achieves remarkable depth through layered stone arrangements, a two-tier waterfall, ancient pine trees, moss ground cover, and a koi pond. The garden is designed for viewing from the reception room (zashiki), where the tokonoma alcove's framing creates a 'living scroll painting' (shakkei technique). The combination of authentic samurai residence and exquisite garden provides intimate insight into Edo Period warrior-class aesthetics and daily life, far more personal than larger castle or museum displays.
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