Kamiza (上座 ) is the Japanese language
term referring to the "top seat" within a room, meaning the place of
honor; the term also applies to the best seats in air-planes, trains,
and cars.
The antonym, meaning "bottom seat," is shimoza (下座).
In a room, the kamiza
is the seat or position that is most comfortable, usually furthest from
the door -- because this is warmest, and was safest from attack back in
the feudal period.
In a traditional washitsu room it would often be a zabuton placed so the person sitting there has his back to the tokonoma; the kamiza is the spot closest to the tokonoma or simply farthest from the door in a room lacking a tokonoma.
In a Western-style room it would be a comfortable armchair or sofa, or the head of a table. The term is general, and does not only apply to Japanese culture.
The best seats in a car
in descending order of rank are: directly behind the driver, behind the
front passenger, in the middle of the back seat, front passenger seat,
driver. In air-plane or train passenger seating, the "top seat" is the window-side, followed by the aisle seat and then the middle seat.
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