Yamazaki Sōkan
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Yamazaki Sōkan (山崎宗鑑) (1465–1553) was a ''
renga ''Renga'' (, ''linked poem'') is a genre of Japanese collaborative poetry in which alternating stanzas, or ''ku (''句), of 5-7-5 and 7-7 morae (sound units, not to be confused with syllables) per line are linked in succession by multiple poets ...
'' and ''
haikai ''Haikai'' ( Japanese 俳諧 ''comic, unorthodox'') may refer in both Japanese and English to ''haikai no renga'' ( renku), a popular genre of Japanese linked verse, which developed in the sixteenth century out of the earlier aristocratic renga. ...
'' poet from
Ōmi Province was a Provinces of Japan, province of Japan, which today comprises Shiga Prefecture. It was one of the provinces that made up the Tōsandō Circuit (subnational entity), circuit. Its nickname is . Under the ''Engishiki'' classification system, ...
,
Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
. His real name was Shina Norishige, and he was also called Yasaburō; "Yamazaki Sōkan" was a pen-name ('' haimyō'').


Biography

Originally serving as a court calligrapher for the ninth Ashikaga shōgun,
Ashikaga Yoshihisa was the 9th ''shōgun'' of the Ashikaga shogunate who reigned from 1473 to 1489 during the Muromachi period of Japan.Ackroyd, Joyce. (1982) ''Lessons from History: The Tokushi Yoron'', p. 331. Yoshihisa was the son of the eighth ''shōgun'' Ash ...
, the poet became a Buddhist monk and entered seclusion following the shōgun's death in 1489. Traveling through
Settsu is a city located in Osaka Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 87,143 in 40,825 households and a population density of 5700 persons per km2. The total area of the city is . It is a suburban city of Osaka City and a pa ...
and
Yamashiro province was a province of Japan, located in Kinai. It overlaps the southern part of modern Kyoto Prefecture on Honshū. Aliases include , the rare , and . It is classified as an upper province in the '' Engishiki''. Yamashiro Province included Kyoto it ...
s, he finally settled in a place called Yamazaki. Establishing his hermitage, which he named Taigetsu-an, he adopted the name Yamazaki Sōkan. The location of this hermitage is debated, since the town of
Shimamoto, Osaka 280px, Suntory Yamazaki distillery in Shimamoto is a town consisting of the entirety of Mishima District, Osaka Prefecture, Japan. , the town had an estimated population of 32,292 in 14334 households, and a population density of 1900 people per ...
, claims to contain its remains, as does the Myōkian, a temple in
Ōyamazaki, Kyoto is a town located in Otokuni District, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. , the town has an estimated population of 16,219 in 6722 households and a population density of 2700 persons per km². The total area of the town is . Geography Ōyamazaki is locat ...
. Sōkan left Yamazaki in 1523 and settled five years later in the town of Kan'onji in
Sanuki province was a province of Japan in the area of northeastern Shikoku. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "''Sanuki''" in . Sanuki bordered on Awa to the south, and Iyo to the west. Its abbreviated form name was . In terms of the Gokishichidō system, ...
. On the grounds of Kōshōji, he made a hermitage for himself called Ichiya-an, where he spent the rest of his life composing poems. Though his poems were not widely distributed at first, they were soon compiled into a text called ''Daitsukubashū''. He also compiled and edited the ''Inu-tsukuba-shū'' (犬筑波集), another important anthology of ''renga'' and ''haikai''. His unrefined style came to be influential and inspired the development of the ''danrin'' style of poetry, which emerged in the early 17th century. Sōkan died in 1553, after gaining a degree of fame and wealth for his poems and calligraphy.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Yamazaki Sokan Japanese male poets 1465 births 1553 deaths Writers of the Muromachi period 16th-century Japanese poets Japanese haiku poets