Imagawa Sadayo

Imagawa Sadayo (Japanese今 川 贞 世, Imagawa Sadayo; * 1326, † 1420 ) was a Japanese poet and Kriegsadeliger.

Imagawa Sadayo was the son of Imagawa Norikunis, shogun Ashikaga Takauji a follower of. He stood first in the service of Ashikaga Yoshi Akira and his son Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. This sent him in 1370 as a military governor by Kyushu ( Kyushu Tandai ). In addition, he held various posts as provincial military governor ( shugo ) holds. After he was on the basis of a libel deposed in 1395 from his post in Kyūshū, he retired as a Buddhist monk under the name Imagawa Ryōshun (Japanese今 川 了 俊) in the province of Suruga and devoted himself to his literary interests.

Even as a young man lay Imagawa great emphasis on a well rounded education. He was a student of the waka poet Reizei Tamehide and himself stood out as a poet. In 1402 he published under the title Nan Taiheiki (Japanese难 太平 记) a critique of Taiheiki. In 1412 he wrote a treatise for his brother and heir Imagawa Tadaaki.

Swell

  • Samurai Archives - Imagawa Sadayo
  • Shinkei, ( translator's: Esperanza Ramirez -Christensen U. ): murmured conversations: a treatise on poetry and Buddhism, Stanford University Press, 2008, ISBN 9780804748636, p 213
  • Maria Verena Blümmer: The contribution of Nenjūgyōji - Utaawase to Zeremonialtradition: Andreas Mrugalla: 11 German- Japanese Studies in Trier 1999 Vol 1: history, intellectual history, religion, society, politics, law, economics, LIT Verlag Münster, 2001, ISBN 9783825844639, p 136
  • Louis Frédéric: Japan encyclopedia p 382
  • Author
  • Poetry
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • Literature (14th century)
  • Literature ( 15th century )
  • Born in 1326
  • Died in 1420
  • Man
409899
de