• Thumbnail for Matsuo Bashō
    Major Anthologies of Bashō (Bashō Shichibu Shū) Matsuo, Bashō (2005). Bashō's Journey: Selected Literary Prose by Matsuo Bashō. trans. David Landis Barnhill...
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  • Thumbnail for Oku no Hosomichi
    Oku no Hosomichi (category Works by Matsuo Bashō)
    Road to the Interior, is a major work of haibun by the Japanese poet Matsuo Bashō, considered one of the major texts of Japanese literature of the Edo...
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  • basho or bashō in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694) was a Japanese Edo-period poet. Basho or Bashō may also refer to: Bashō (crater)...
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  • Nozarashi Kikō (category Works by Matsuo Bashō)
    Matsuo Bashō. Written in the summer of 1684, the work covers Bashō's journey. According to translator Nobuyuki Yuasa, it is "the first work of Bashō where...
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  • footballer Ayumu Matsuo (松尾 歩, born 1980), Japanese shogi player Bashō Matsuo (松尾 芭蕉, 1644–1694), Japanese Edo period poet Erika Matsuo (松尾 依里佳, born 1984)...
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  • The Seashell Game (category Works by Matsuo Bashō)
    Japanese poet Matsuo Bashō, in which each haiku is followed by critical commentary he made as referee for a haiku contest. It is Bashō's earliest known...
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  • vulgarisms: the use of what Bashō called "more homely images, such as a crow picking mud-snails in a rice paddy". Matsuo Bashō is one of the most famous...
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  • Kashima Kikō (category Works by Matsuo Bashō)
    OCLC 469779524. Matsuo, Bashō (1999). The Essential Bashō. trans. Sam Hamill. Boston: Shambhala. ISBN 978-1-57062-282-3. Matsuo, Bashō (2000). Narrow Road...
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  • Thumbnail for Takarai Kikaku
    a Japanese haikai poet and among the most accomplished disciples of Matsuo Bashō. His father was an Edo doctor, but Kikaku chose to become a professional...
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  • Thumbnail for Haiku
    Haiku (section Bashō)
    seasonal reference. However, haiku by classical Japanese poets, such as Matsuo Bashō, also deviate from the 17-on pattern and sometimes do not contain a kireji...
    46 KB (5,485 words) - 19:42, 30 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mukai Kyorai
    – 8 October 1704) was a Japanese haiku poet, and a close disciple of Matsuo Bashō. A physician's son, Kyorai was born in Nagasaki to a samurai family....
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  • Thumbnail for Harukichi Shimoi
    between Japan and Italy. Shimoi translated works from Yosano Akiko and Matsuo Bashō into Italian, and conversely translated Dante into Japanese. Shimoi was...
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  • Sarumino (category Works by Matsuo Bashō)
    Mukai Kyorai under the supervision of Matsuo Bashō. Sarumino is one of the Seven Major Anthologies of Bashō (Bashō Shichibu Shū), and, together with the...
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  • 1991, ISBN 9780880013215 The Essential Haiku: Versions of Bashō, Buson, and Issa, Bashō Matsuo, Buson Yosano, Issa Kobayashi (edited with verse translation...
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  • that he changed his name to Basho, in honor of the Japanese poet, Matsuo Bashō. Basho saw the steel string guitar as a concert instrument, and wanted to...
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  • Thumbnail for Sonome
    acquaintance and friend of Matsuo Bashō, and their correspondence is a treasure of zen and haiku history. On a final visit in 1694, Bashō paid homage to her in...
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  • seventeenth-century (Edo period) Japanese poet and samurai who studied under Matsuo Bashō. Masahide practiced medicine in Zeze and led a group of poets who built...
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  • Hori Bakusui 堀麦水 (1718-1783) was a major Japanese poet of the Matsuo Bashō revival, writing traditional style haiku poems. Little is known of Bakusui's...
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  • Thumbnail for Yamadera Basho Memorial Museum
    The Yamadera Basho Memorial Museum (山寺芭蕉記念館, Yamadera Bashō Kinenkan) was established in 1989 as part of the cultural building boom in Yamagata, Japan...
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  • they ran the risk of ending up with mere frivolity. The renowned poet Matsuo Bashō had begun his poetic training in the Teimon school; but was much impressed...
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  • Thumbnail for Matsunaga Teitoku
    trans., The Narrow Road to the Deep North (1983) p. 20-1 Makoto Ueda, Matsuo Bashō (1982) p. 38-40 Nobuyuki Yuasa trans., The Narrow Road to the Deep North...
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  • traveled throughout the country composing poems and helped lead the Matsuo Bashō revival movement of the eighteenth century. Miura grew up in Shima province...
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  • phrase used in many renku verses List of Japanese poetry anthologies Matsuo Bashō – the 17th-century Japanese poet who brought renku to a pinnacle of artistic...
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  • Thumbnail for Fukagawa, Tokyo
    Fukagawa is known for its relations to the famous Japanese poet, Matsuo Bashō. In 1680, Bashō moved to Fukagawa. Here, he wrote one of his most famous poems...
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  • or of its later derivative, renku (haikai no renga). From the time of Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694), the hokku began to appear as an independent poem, and was...
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  • Thumbnail for Bashō (crater)
    Bashō is a crater on Mercury named after Matsuo Bashō, a 17th-century Japanese writer. Bashō crater is only 74.62 kilometers (46.37 mi) in diameter, but...
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  • Thumbnail for Tororo (food)
    Retrieved 29 December 2023. Matsuo, Bashō (1981) [Composed 1691]. The Monkey's Straw Raincoat and Other Poetry of the Basho School 猿蓑. Translated by Miner...
    15 KB (1,472 words) - 02:05, 28 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Shirasagiyu Tawaraya
    were described in poems from the 17th century by famous Japanese poet Matsuo Bashō. The spring water contains calcium, sodium, sulfate and is reputed to...
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  • Thumbnail for Tōdai-ji
    to create another, more well-seated head for the restored Daibutsu. Matsuo Bashō refers to the Great Buddha statue in a haiku (1689–1670): 初雪や / いつ大仏...
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  • Thumbnail for Sanemori
    (2012) Quoted in J-P Potet, Yeats and Noh (2012) p. 65 Makoto Ueda, Matsuo Bashō (1982) p. 38 Makoto Ueda, Matsuo Bashō (1982) p. 141 Sanemori: Synopsis...
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