Ryōtarō Shiba

Shiba Ryotaro (Japanese司马 辽 太郎, actually: Fukuda Teiichi (福田 定 一), born August 7, 1923 in Osaka, † February 12, 1996 ibid ) was a Japanese writer.

Life

Shiba studied Mongolian at the Foreign Language School, Osaka ( Osaka University today ). He worked as a journalist for the newspaper Sankei Shimbun, before he turned to after the Second World War to writing. Already with his first novel fukuro no Shiro he received the 1959 Naoki Prize. As a result, he has written numerous, famous in Japan historical novels that appeared in a fifty -volume work output. In German translation so far only the novel The Last Shogun ( Saigo no Shogun ) was published. Several of his novels were also made ​​into a film. In the years 1968 to 1972, he published the novel Saka no Ue no Kumo in several volumes. Between 1971 and 1996, appeared in the magazine Shukan Asahi 1,147 travel reports under the title Kaidō o Yuku (街道をゆく), which were partly edited for television.

In 1966, Shiba the Kikuchi Kan Prize for Ryoma ga Yuku, Kunitori Monogatari, among other things, the 1967 Mainichi Art Award for Junshi, 1968 Osaragi - Jiro Prize for the novel Dattan Shippūroku, 1976 Great price for Japanese literature and the price Japanese Academy of Arts for Kūkai no fûkei. In 1981 he was awarded the Yomiuri Literary Prize for hitobito no Ashioto, 1982 with the Asahi Prize. In 1991 he was honored as a person with special cultural merits. Ryoma ga Yuku, which was originally published in 1962-1966 in the daily newspaper Sankei Shimbun, sold in book form more than 24 million times.

In all, he published until 2006, more than 600 titles, which together have sold more than 200 million times.

From 1986 to 1990 he headed the Foundation of the International Institute for Children's Literature, Osaka. He was also the selection committee of Watsuji Tetsuro - Culture Prize.

In his honor, the Shiba Ryotaro - Prize has been awarded since 1998.

Works

History novels

  • Fukuro no Shiro (梟 の 城), 1959, on Ishikawa Goemon
  • Kamigata Bushido (上方 武士道), 1960
  • Kaze no Bushi (風 の 武士), 1961
  • Sen'un no Yume (戦雲 の 夢), 1961, on Chosokabe Morichika
  • Fujin no Mon (風神 の 門), 1962, over Kirigakure Saizo
  • Ryuma ga Yuku (竜馬がゆく), from 1963 to 1966, Sakamoto Ryoma and Nakaoka Shintaro over
  • Moeyo Ken (燃えよ剣), 1964, about Hijikata toshizo
  • Shirikurae Magoichi (尻啖え 孫市), 1964
  • Komyo ga Tsuji (功名が辻), 1965, on Kazutoyo Yamauchi and his wife Chiyo
  • Shiro o Toru Hanashi (城 を とる 話), 1965
  • Kunitori Monogatari (国 盗り 物語), 1965, about Saitō Dosan, Oda Nobunaga and Akechi Mitsuhide
  • Hokuto no Hito (北斗 の 人), 1966 on Chiba Shusaku
  • Niwaka Naniwa Yūkyōden (俄 浪 华 游侠 伝), 1966,
  • Sekigahara (関ヶ原), 1966, about Shima Sakon, Ishida Mitsunari and Tokugawa Ieyasu
  • Saigo no Shogun (最後 の 将軍), 1966, Tokugawa Yoshinobu over
  • Juichi - banme no Shishi (十 一 番目 の 志士), 1967
  • Junshi (殉 死), 1967, about Nogi Maresuke
  • Natsukusa no Fu (夏草の賦), 1968, Chosokabe Motochika on
  • Shinshi Taikōki (新 史 太 合 记), 1968, about Toyotomi Hideyoshi
  • Yoshitsune (义 経), 1968, about Minamoto no Yoshitsune
  • Tōge (峠), 1968, about Kawai Tsugunosuke
  • Musashi (武 蔵), 1968, about Miyamoto Musashi
  • Saka no Ue no Kumo (坂の上 の 雲), 1969-1972, on Yoshifuru Akiyama, Akiyama Saneyuki, Masaoka Shiki
  • Yōkai (妖怪), 1969, On Hino Tomiko Ashikaga Yoshimasa and
  • Daitō Zenshi (大盗 禅师), 1969, about Yui and Zheng Chenggong SHOSETSU
  • Saigetsu (歳 月), 1969
  • Yoni Sumu Hibi (世に棲む日日), 1971, Takasugi Shinsaku and Yoshida Shoin over
  • Jōsai (城 塞), 1971-1972 about Obata Kagenori
  • Kashin (花 神), 1972, over Omura Masujirō, Fukuzawa Yukichi and Ogata Kōan
  • HAO no Ie (覇王 の 家), 1973, on Tokugawa Ieyasu
  • Harima - nada Monogatari (播 磨 滩 物语) 1975 on Kuroda Yoshitaka
  • Tobu ga Gotoku (翔ぶが如く), Saigo Takamori over
  • Kūkai no fûkei (空海 の 風景), 1975, about Kūkai
  • Kocho no Yume (胡蝶 の 夢), 1979, on Shiba Ryokai, Matsumoto and Seki Ryōjun Kansai
  • Kou to Ryuho (項羽と劉邦), 1980
  • Hitobito no Ashioto (ひとびと の 跫音), 1981, on Masaoka Chūsaburō
  • Nanohana no Oki (菜の花の沖), 1982, on Takadaya Kahei
  • Hakone no Saka (箱根 の 坂) 1984 on Hōjō Soun
  • Dattan Shippūroku (鞑靼 疾风 录), 1987, about Nurhaci and Huang Taiji

Short story collections (selection)

  • Shiroi Kangiten (白い 歓喜天), 1958
  • Osaka Samurai (大阪 侍), 1959
  • Saigo no Igamono (最後 の 伊賀 者), 1960
  • Kashin Koji no genjutsu (果心 居士 の 幻術), 1961
  • Oo, Taiho (おお,大炮), 1961
  • Ichiya Kanjo (一夜 官 女), 1962
  • Shinsetsu Miyamoto Musashi (真 说 宫本 武 蔵), 1962
  • Hanafusa Sukebe (花房 助 兵卫), 1963
  • Bakumatsu (幕末), 1963
  • Keppūroku Shinsengumi (新 选 组 血 风 录), 1964
  • Kibo no Hito (鬼謀 の 人), 1964
  • Yotte Soro (酔っ て 候), 1965
  • Toyotomi - ke no hitobito (豊臣 家 の 人 々 ), 1967
  • OJO no Goeisha (王城 の 護衛 者), 1968
  • Kenka Soun (喧哗 草 云), 1968
  • Kogyo Bōjigataku Soro (故郷 忘 じ がたく 候), 1968
  • Hitokiri Izo (人斬り以蔵), 1969
  • Bajo Shōnen Yogu (馬上 少年 過 ぐ), 1970
  • Shiba Ryotaro rope Soshu (司马辽太郎 短篇 総 集), 1971, edition of his short stories in 12 volumes
  • Mokuyōtō no Yakai (木曜 島 の 夜会), 1977
  • Ore wa gongs (おれ は 権現), 1982
  • Gunji Futari (军师 二人), 1985
  • Armstrong hō (アーム ストロング 砲), 1988
  • Persia no Genjutsushi (ペルシャ の 幻術 師), 2001
  • Samurai wa Kowai (侍 は こわい), 2005
  • Kayōtan (花妖 谭), 2009

From 1973 to 2000 from the publisher Bungei Shunju published a 68- volume complete edition.

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