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Kamo no Mabuchi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kamo no Mabuchi
Mabuchi's portrait by his student
Born(1697-04-24)April 24, 1697
DiedNovember 27, 1769(1769-11-27) (aged 72)
Edo, Japan
NationalityJapanese
Bust of Mabuchi in Hamamatsu

Kamo no Mabuchi, or Mabuchi of Kamo (賀茂 真淵, 24 April 1697 – 27 November 1769) was a kokugaku scholar, poet and philologist during mid-Edo period Japan. Along with Kada no Azumamaro, Motoori Norinaga, and Hirata Atsutane, he was regarded as one of the Four Great Men of Kokugaku, and through his research into the spirit of ancient Japan (through his studies of the Man'yōshū and other works of ancient literature) he expounded on the theory of magokoro, which he held to be fundamental to the history of Japan.[1] Independently of and alongside his contemporary Motoori Norinaga, Mabuchi is accredited with the initial discovery of Lyman's Law, governing rendaku in the Japanese language, though which would later be named after Benjamin Smith Lyman.

Biography

Mabuchi was born in 1697 in the village of Iba in Tōtōmi Province (currently part of the city of Hamamatsu, Shizuoka), as the third son of Okabe Masanobu. The Okabe were hereditary kannushi of Kamo Shrine in Kyoto, but his father was from a cadet branch of the clan and was a farmer. In 1707, he began training under Sugiura Kuniakira, a kokugaku scholar with a private academy in Hamamatsu and a disciple of Kada no Azumamaro. Mabuchi married in 1723, but his wife died the following year. At the age of 37, Mabuchi moved to Kyoto to study directly under Kada no Azumamaro. Following the master's death in 1736, Mabuchi moved to Edo in 1738 where he taught kokugaku. In 1746, he was hired by Tokugawa Munetake, the head of the Tayasu branch of the Tokugawa clan.

Mabuchi's works include commentaries on the Man'yōshū, norito (Shinto prayers), kagura (Shinto dances), the Tale of Genji, the meaning of poems, and other ancient works and their themes. His disciples included Motoori Norinaga, Arakida Hisaoyu, Kato Chikage, Murata Harumi, Katori Nahiko, Hanawa Hokiichi, Uchiyama Matatsu, and Kurita Hijimaro, and also included several women.

In 1763, while Mabuchi was on his way to Ise Shrine, Motoori Norinaga sought him out and became a disciple. This single night of discussions, later known as "the night in Matsuzaka", was the only occasion on which Norinaga directly received teaching from Mabuchi, although the two men later corresponded.

Mabuchi died in 1769 in Edo, at the age of 73. His grave can be found in the Tōkai-ji cemetery in Shinagawa and was designed a  National Historic Site in 1926.[2] An explanatory marker stands at the site of Mabuchi's residence in Edo (Hisamatsu-cho, Nihonbashi, Chūō, Tokyo), and a memorial museum was built beside the house where he was born in Hamamatsu.

See also

References

  1. ^ Olivier Ansart (1994). Études Anciennes et Études Nationales dans le Japon du XVIIIème siècle : la Nature, l'Artifice et le Mal chez Ogyû Sorai et Motoori Norinaga [Ancient Studies and National Studies in 18th Century Japan: Nature, Artifice and Evil in Ogyû Sorai and Motoori Norinaga] (in French). pp. 60, 63, 64.
  2. ^ "Cultural Heritage Online". Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
This page was last edited on 4 October 2023, at 04:20
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