Yasui Santetsu (Yasui House)
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Yasui Santetsu (Yasui House)
Yasui Santetsu may refer to: * Yasui Santetsu (Yasui house), go player and head of the Yasui house between 1612 and 1644 * Shibukawa Shunkai born as Yasui Santetsu (), later called Motoi Santetsu (), was a Japanese scholar, go player and the first official astronomer appointed of the Edo period. He revised the Chinese lunisolar calendar at the shogunate request, drawing up the Jō ...
(1639–1715), Japanese astronomer and go player originally named Yasui Santetsu {{hndis ...
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Yasui Santetsu (Yasui House)
Yasui Santetsu may refer to: * Yasui Santetsu (Yasui house), go player and head of the Yasui house between 1612 and 1644 * Shibukawa Shunkai born as Yasui Santetsu (), later called Motoi Santetsu (), was a Japanese scholar, go player and the first official astronomer appointed of the Edo period. He revised the Chinese lunisolar calendar at the shogunate request, drawing up the Jō ...
(1639–1715), Japanese astronomer and go player originally named Yasui Santetsu {{hndis ...
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Yasui House
In the history of Go in Japan, the four Go houses were four major schools of Go instituted, supported, and controlled by the state, at the beginning of the Tokugawa shogunate. (There were also many minor houses.) At roughly the same time shogi was organised into three houses. Here "house" implies an institution run on the recognised lines of the ''iemoto'' system common in all Japanese traditional arts. In particular, the house head had, in three of the four cases, a name handed down: Inoue Inseki, Yasui Senkaku, Hayashi Monnyu. References to these names, therefore, mean to the contemporary head of the house. The four houses were the Honinbo, Hayashi, Inoue, and Yasui. They were originally designed to be on a par with each other, and competed in the official castle games called '' oshirogo''. The houses Hon'inbō The Hon'inbō house (本因家) was easily the strongest school of Go for most of its existence. It was established in 1612 and survived until 1940. Upon the closure ...
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