- Kamo no Mabuchi
Kamo no Mabuchi (Japanese: 賀茂真淵;
24 April 1697 -27 November 1769 ) was a Japanesepoet andphilologist of theEdo period .Mabuchi conducted research into the spirit of ancient Japan through his studies of the
Man'yōshū and other works of ancient literature. A disciple ofKada no Azumamaro , Mabuchi is regarded as one of the four greats ofKokugaku .Mabuchi’s works include commentaries on the
Man'yōshū , "norito " (Shinto prayers), "kagura " (Shinto dances), theTale 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 Tahiko, Hanawa Hokiichi, Uchiyama Matatsu, and Kurita Hijimaro.Life
Mabuchi was born in 1697 as the third son of the
Hamamatsu Shinto priest Okabe Masanobu. The Okabe were a lower branch ofKamo Shrine in Kyoto.At the age of 37, Mabuchi moved to
Kyoto and became a disciple of Kada no Azumamaro. Following the master’s death in 1736, Mabuchi moved toEdo in 1738 where he taught Kokugaku.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.
An explanatory marker stands at the site of Mabuchi’s residence in Edo (
Hisamatsu-cho ,Nihonbashi ,Chūō, Tokyo ). His grave can be found in theTokaiji cemetery in Shinagawa. A museum stands beside the house where he was born in Hamamatsu (Higashi-Iba , Hamamatsu, Shizuoka).ee also
*
Kokugaku
*Man'yōshū
*Shinto
*Kada no Azumamaro
*Japanese nationalism
*Keichū
*Motoori Norinaga
*Ueda Akinari
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