Ki no Tsurayuki



Creator Name: Ki no Tsurayuki
Creator Type: Literature / Science / Philosophy
Dates: 872 - 945
Language: Japanese

Ki no Tsurayuki ( , 872 June 30, 945) was a Japanese author, poet and courtier of the Heian period. He is best known as the principal compiler of the Kokin Wakash, also writing its Japanese Preface, and as a possible author of the Tosa Diary, although this was published anonymously.

Tsurayuki was a son of Ki no Mochiyuki. In the 890s he became a poet of waka, short poems composed in Japanese. In 905, under the order of Emperor Daigo, he was one of four poets selected to compile the Kokin Wakash, the first imperially-sponsored anthology (chokusen-sh) of waka poetry.

After holding a few offices in Kyoto, he was appointed the provincial governor of Tosa Province and stayed there from 930 until 935. Later he was presumably appointed the provincial governor of Su Province, since it was recorded that he held a waka party (Utaai) at his home in Suo.

He is well known for his waka and is counted as one of the Thirty-six Poetry Immortals selected by Fujiwara no Kint. He was also known as one of the editors of the Kokin Wakash. Tsurayuki wrote one of two prefaces to Kokin Wakash; the other is in Chinese. His preface was the first critical essay on waka. He wrote of its history from its mythological origin to his contemporary waka, which he grouped into genres, referred to some major poets and gave a bit of harsh criticism to his predecessors like Ariwara no Narihira.

His waka is included in one of the important Japanese poetry anthologies, the Hyakunin Isshu, which was compiled in the 13th century by Fujiwara no Teika, long after Tsurayuki's death.

Works

Besides the Kokin Wakash and its Japanese preface, Tsurayuki's major literary work was the Tosa Nikki (, "Tosa Diary"), which was written using kana. The text details a trip in 935 returning to Kyoto from Tosa Province, where Tsurayuki had been the provincial governor.

Tale of Genji

Tsurayuki's name is referred to in the Tale of Genji as a waka master. In this story, Emperor Uda ordered him and a number of female poets to write waka on his panels as accessories.

External links

  • Media related to Ki no Tsurayuki at Wikimedia Commons
  • Works by or about Ki no Tsurayuki at Internet Archive
  • Works by Ki no Tsurayuki at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
  • e-texts of Tsurayuki's works at Aozora Bunko
  • A Note on the English Translation: an example of his poem from the Hyakunin Isshu with seven different translations,
  • Also see Primitive and Mediaeval Japanese Texts translated into English by F. V. Dickins. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1906. pp 379391.

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Movements

Heian Literature

Heian Literature

794 - 1185

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