Fujiwara no Tameie

Fujiwara no Tameie
Native name 藤原 為家
Born 1198 (1198)
Died 1275 (aged 7677)
Notable work Anthology of Poetry
Spouse Abutsu-ni
Children Nijō Tameuji, Kyōgoku Tamenori and Reizei Tamesuke

Fujiwara no Tameie (藤原 為家, 1198-1275) was a Japanese poet and compiler of Imperial anthologies of poems.[1]

Tameie was the second son of poet Teika and married Abutsu-ni. He was the central figure in a circle of Japanese poets after the Jōkyū War in 1221. His three sons were Nijō Tameuji, Kyōgoku Tamenori and Reizei Tamesuke. They each established rival families of poets—the Nijō, the Koyōgoku and the Reizei.[2]

Starting in 1250, Tameie was among those who held the ritsuryō office of chief administrator of the Ministry of Taxation (民部卿, Minbu-kyō).[3] In 1256, he abandoned public life to become a Buddhist monk, taking the name Minbukyō-nyūdō.[2]

Selected work

Tameie's published writings encompass 23 works in 28 publications in 1 language and 124 library holdings.[4]

  • 2002 Anthology of Poetry (藤原為家全歌集, Fujiwara Tameie zenkash, OCLC 050635854)

Notes

  1. Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric et al. (2005). "Fujiwara no Tameie" in Japan Encyclopedia, pp. 209-210., p. 209, at Google Books
  2. 1 2 Nussbaum, p. 210., p. 210, at Google Books
  3. Nussbaum, "Mimbushō," p. 632., p. 632, at Google Books
  4. WorldCat Identities Archived December 30, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.: 藤原為家 1198-1275

References

  • Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan Encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 48943301



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