Shimazaki Masaki

Shimazaki Masaki
島崎 正樹
Portrait photograph of Shimazaki Masaki.
Year unknown.
Honjin, Toiya, and Shōya of Magome Station
Personal details
Born
Shimazaki Kanatarō (島崎 鍛名太郎)

June 13, 1831
Magome Station, Mino Province, Japan
DiedNovember 29, 1886(1886-11-29) (aged 55)
Misaka Village, Nagano Prefecture, Japan (today Nakatsugawa, Gifu Prefecture)
SpouseShimazaki Nui (島崎ぬい)
ChildrenShimazaki Tōson
Shimazaki Sono
Shimazaki Tomoya
Writing career
Pen nameShōsui'en Seiga (松翠園静雅)
San'en (粲園)
Notable worksPine Boughs (松か枝, Matsukae)[1][2]

Shimazaki Masaki (島崎 正樹, 1834–1886) was a Japanese gōnō, honjin master, student of kokugaku, and Shinto priest. He was the father of Shimazaki Tōson. He primarily wrote under the name of Aratamanoya (璞堂),[1] but later in life also adopted the names Shizunoya (静舎, transl. "house of serenity") and finally Kanzanrō (観山楼). His courtesy name was Sachio (禎夫), and he was referred to by relatives as Kichizaemon (吉左衛門), the family's hereditary name.[3]

  1. ^ Naff, William (November 30, 2010). The Kiso Road: The Life and Times of Shimazaki Toson (1st ed.). University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0824832186.
  2. ^ 島崎 Shimazaki, 正樹 Masaki; 島崎 Shimazaki, 藤村 Tōson (1912). 島崎正樹遺稿・松か枝 Posthumous Manuscripts of Shimazaki Masaki - Matsukae (in Japanese) (1st ed.). Japan: Published privately.
  3. ^ 朝日日本歴史人物事典 Asahi Nihon rekishi jinbutsu jiten (in Japanese). 朝日新聞社 Asahi Shinbun Sha. November 1, 1994. ISBN 4023400521.