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Kagami Shikō

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Revision as of 01:39, 17 January 2025 by Laogeodritt (talk | contribs) (fix citation template calls)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) Japanese poet In this Japanese name, the surname is Kagami.
Kagami Shikō
Native name各務 支考
Born1665 (1665)
Yamagata district, Mino Province
DiedMarch 14, 1731(1731-03-14) (aged 86–87)
Daichi-ji Temple
Pen nameTōkabō 東華房
Seikabō 西華房
Shishian 獅子庵
Renjibō 蓮二房
Hakukyō 白狂
OccupationZen monk, poet
NationalityJapanese
Notable worksKuzu no matsubara (葛の松原)
Honchō bunkan (本朝文鑑) (editor)

Kagami Shikō (各務 支考, 1665 – 14 March 1731), often known by the mononym Shiko, was a Japanese haiku poet of the early Edo period, known as one of Matsuo Bashō's Ten Eminent Disciples (蕉門十鉄, Shōmon juttetsu) and the originator of the Shishimon school of poetry, also known as the Mino school. As of 2024, Shishimon has remained active to the present day, the school's 41st master having held this position since 2006.


Biography

Shikō was born in Nishiyama, Kitano Village, Yamagata district, Mino Province (in present-day Gifu). He lost his father at a young age and entered the Daichi-ji Temple to train as a Zen Buddhist monk. Around the age of 19, however, he left the temple and returned to secular life, living in Kyōto and Iseyama. He was adopted by the Kagami family, into which his second eldest sister had married, and took their name.

Shikō met Matsuo Bashō in Ōmi in April 1690, at the age of 26, and became his disciple. Consequently, he accompanied Bashō to Edo the following year. In 1692, he travelled to Mutsu Province and published his first treatise on haiku, Kuzu no matsubara (葛の松原, Pine-Grove Kudzu). In 1694, he accompanied Bashō on his journey from Iga Province to Osaka. When Bashō came down with a stomach illness, Shikō was present at his deathbed and wrote Bashō's will.

Following his teacher's death, Shikō frequently toured around Iga, Ise, Ōmi, Edo and elsewhere in the country, holding memorial performances. During this time, he collected Bashō's poems and writings into the Oi Nikki (笈日記, Records in a Knapsack).

In 1711, wishing to hear his own posthumous reputation, he feigned his own death. Thereafter, he posed as his own disciple, publishing under pseudonyms like Renjibō and Watanabe no Kyō (渡辺ノ狂)

Around this time, Shikō established himself at a hermitage in Yamada, Ise Province. By the time that he published the Ise shin hyakuin (伊勢新百, New 100 Poems of Ise), his poetic style had become firmly established. Shikō was very active during this period: he travelled far, visiting Kyūshū, Chūgoku, Shikoku, and Hokuriku; published many haiku collections and treatises; and took on many disciples.

After 1724, he returned to his hometown in Mino, where he lived at the Shishi-an hermitage. During these final years of his life, he named Rogenbō Rikō as the successor of his school of poetry, which came to be known as the Mino School (美濃派, minoha), after his home province, or Shishimon (獅子門). Shikō passed away at Shishi-an in 1731, at the age of 67, having continued to write right up to his death, and was buried in the tomb he had built himself at Daichiji Temple. Subsequently, Rogenbō published a memorial anthology of Kagami's writings titled 文星観 (Bunseikan, Star-like writings). The Shishi-an hermitage is designated a historic site by Gifu Prefecture.

References

  1. ^ "Kagami Shikō" 各務支考. 朝日日本歴史人物事典 Asahi nihon rekishi jinbutsu kototen [Encyclopædia of Japanese Historical Figures] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Asahi Shimbun Publications. 1994. ISBN 978-4023400528. Retrieved 2025-01-12.
  2. ^ Frédéric, Louis (2002). Japan Encyclopedia. Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0674007703.
  3. "Shishimon WEB". Retrieved 2025-01-17.
  4. ^ Okamoto, Masaru; Kira, Sueo (2006). Kinseibungaku kenkyū jiten shimpan 近世文学研究事典 新版 [Encyclopædia of Edō Literature Research]. Ōfū. ISBN 978-4273033842.
  5. "Kagami Shikō" 各務支考. ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典 Britannica kokusai daihyakkajiten shōkōmokujiten [International Encyclopædia Brittanica Short Entries Encyclopedia] (in Japanese). Britannica Japan. Retrieved 2025-01-12.
  6. Gifu City. "Miwa no rekishi bunka sansaki GUIDE" 三輪の歴史文化散策ガイド [Miwa History and Culture Walking Guide] (PDF). Gifu City. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-09-11. Retrieved 2021-09-11.

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