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Ikeda Munemasa

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Ikeda Munemasa
Trì điền tông chính
Portrait from theHayashibara Museum of Art
Daimyō
Preceded byIkeda Tsugumasa
Personal details
BornJune 1727
DiedMarch 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]

Ikeda's gravesite at the Sogenji temple inOkayama.

Family

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  • 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

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  1. ^"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
  2. ^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)
  3. ^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...
  4. ^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.
  5. ^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.
  6. ^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.
  7. ^"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