Yamamoto Tsunetomo
Yamamoto Tsunetomo | |
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Yamamoto Tsunetomo | |
Born | June 11, 1659 |
Died | November 30, 1719 60) | (aged
Nationality | Japanese |
Ethnicity | Japanese |
Religion | Shinto |
Yamamoto Tsunetomo (山本 常朝), also read Yamamoto Jōchō (June 11, 1659 – November 30, 1719) was a samurai of the Saga Domain in Hizen Province under his lord Nabeshima Mitsushige.[1][2] For thirty years Yamamoto devoted his life to the service of his lord and clan. When Nabeshima died in 1700, Yamamoto did not choose to follow his master in death in junshi because the master had expressed a dislike of the practice in his life. Instead, Yamamoto followed his lord's wishes and refrained from junshi. After some disagreements with Nabeshima's successor, Yamamoto renounced the world and retired to a hermitage in the mountains. Later in life (between 1709 and 1716), he narrated many of his thoughts to a fellow samurai, Tsuramoto Tashiro. Many of these aphorisms concerned his lord's father and grandfather Naoshige and the failing ways of the samurai caste. These commentaries were compiled and published in 1716 under the title of Hagakure, a word that can be translated as either In the shadow of Leaves or hidden leaves.[3][4]
The Hagakure was not widely known during the years following Tsunetomo's death, but by the 1930s it had become one of the most famous representatives of bushido taught in Japan. In 2011 a manga/comic book version was published Hagakure, The manga edition, translated by William Scott Wilson, adapted by Sean Michael Wilson and Chie Kutsuwada (Kondansha International Ltd., 2011).
Tsunetomo believed that becoming one with death in one's thoughts, even in life, was the highest attainment of purity and focus. He felt that a resolution to die gives rise to a higher state of life, infused with beauty and grace beyond the reach of those concerned with self-preservation. Some viewed him as a man of immediate action due to some of his quotes, and in the Hagakure he criticized the carefully planned Akō vendetta of the Forty-seven Ronin (a major event in his lifetime) for its delayed response.
Yamamoto Tsunetomo is also known as Yamamoto Jōchō, the name he took after retiring and becoming a monk.
Footnotes
- ↑ Turnbull 2006, p. 71
- ↑ Jansen 2002, p. 102
- ↑ Varley 2000, p. 211
- ↑ Tsunetomo 2002, p. 15
References
- Tsunetomo, Yamamoto (2002). Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai. Wilson, William Scott (translator). Stackpole Books. ISBN 4-7700-2916-0.
- De Bary, William Theodore; Carol Gluck; Arthur E. Tiedemann; Andrew E. Barshay; William M. Bodiford (2001). Sources of Japanese Tradition. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12984-X.
- Jansen, Marius B. (2002). The Making of Modern Japan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-00991-6.
- Turnbull, Stephen (2006). Samurai - the World of the Warrior. Reading: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-951-7.
- Varley, H. Paul (2000). Japanese Culture. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2152-1.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Yamamoto Tsunetomo |
- Hagakure Kikigaki : Orated Aphorisms of Yamamoto Jocho
- Hagakure! (Selected topics from Hagakure)
- Zen and the Art of Divebombing, or The Dark Side of the Tao by Kelley L. Ross, Ph.D.
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