Ikeda Munemasa
Appearance
Ikeda Munemasa | |
---|---|
Trì điền tông chính | |
Daimyō | |
Preceded by | Ikeda Tsugumasa |
Personal details | |
Born | June 1727 |
Died | March 10, 1764 (aged 36–37) |
Ikeda Munemasa( trì điền tông chính ) (June 1727 - March 10, 1764)[1][2][3]was adaimyōofIyo Provincein theEdo periodofJapan.[4]He was the 4th Lord of theOkayama Domainand head of theIkeda clan.[5][3]Ikeda's reign began in 1752, following the retirement of his father,Ikeda Tsugumasa,[6]and lasted until his death in 1764.[2][7]He was lord ofOkayama Castle.His childhood name was Shigetaro ( mậu quá lang ) later Minechiyo ( phong ngàn đại ).
He authoredPortrait of Hitomaro and His Waka Poem,on the subject of thewakapoetKakinomoto no Hitomaro.[citation needed]He was skilled atcalligraphy,haikai,paintingandwaka.[5]
Family
[edit]- Father:Ikeda Tsugumasa
- Mother: Kazuhime
- Wife: Kuroda Fujiko
- Children
- Ikeda Harumasa (1750-1819) by Kuroda Fujiko
- Sagara Nagahiro (1752-1813) by Kuroda Fujiko
- Daughter married Sakakibara Masaatsu by Kuroda Fujiko
References
[edit]- ^"Trì điền tông chính ∥イケダ ムネマサ"(in Japanese).Kokugakuin University.Archived fromthe originalon January 5, 2017.
〔 sinh không năm 〕 hưởng bảo 12 năm ( 1727 ) 6 nguyệt ~ bảo lịch 14 năm ( 1764 ) 3 nguyệt 10 ngày 〔 hưởng thọ 〕38
- ^ab"Trì điền tông chính"(in Japanese).Okayama City.Archived fromthe originalon January 5, 2017.
Hưởng bảo 12 năm (1727) sinh ~ bảo lịch 14 năm (1764) không thành chủ trong lúc bảo lịch 2 năm (1752)~ bảo lịch 14 năm (1764)
- ^abKomatsu, Shigemi (1989).Chinese and Japanese Calligraphy Spanning Two Thousand Years.Prestel Verlag GmbH + Company. p. 141.ISBN9783791310268.
He was born in the family home in Edo, son of Ikeda Munemasa (1725-1764), and was originally named Toshimasa [...] On his father's death in Meiwa 1 (1764) he inherited the clan leadership...
- ^Baroni, Helen Josephine (2002). "Hebiichigo".The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Zen Buddhism.Rosen Publishing Group.p.127.ISBN9780823922406.
A letter in two segments, written by Hakuin Ekaku (1685-1768), a Rinzai monk, in 1754. The letter, composed as a sermon on the Dharma, was addressed to Ikeda Munemasa, daimyō, or military leader, of Iyo province.
- ^ab"Ikeda Munemasa Peony in Basket".Watanabe Japanese Fine Arts. Archived fromthe originalon January 5, 2017.
Ikeda Munemasa(1727-1764), the 4th Lord of Okayama Domain, Bizen Province. The eldest son of Ikeda Tsugumasa. Excelled at painting, calligraphy, haikai, and waka.
- ^Yampolsky, Philip B. (1971).The Zen Master Hakuin: Selected Writings.Columbia University Press.p. 159.ISBN9780231060417.
The Lord of Okayama Castle is Ikeda Tsugumasa (1702-1776). He retired in the twelfth month of 1752.
- ^"Trì Điền thị ( bị trước cương sơn phiên )"(in Japanese). reichsarchiv.jp. Archived fromthe originalon November 4, 2011.
1752-1764 bị trước cương sơn phiên bốn đời phiên chủ