Fujiwara no Atsutaka

Fujiwara no Atsutaka (藤原 敦隆; 1060s–1120) was a Japanese nobleman and waka poet of the Heian period. His real name may have been Tachibana no Atsutaka.

Life

Fujiwara no Atsutaka was a son of the governor of Hizen Province, Fujiwara no Toshikiyo (藤原俊清).[1] His year of birth is unknown,[2] but the Chūyūki's entry for the 27th day of the seventh month of Hōan 1 (22 August 1120 in the Julian calendar) says that he was in his fifties when he died earlier that same month.[1]

The Sonpi Bunmyaku does not mention a "Fujiwara no Atsutaka", but it includes a reference to "Mokunosuke Atsutaka" (木工助敦隆), son of "Tachibana no Toshikiyo" (橘俊清).[1] Atsutaka's court position was Mokunosuke (Assistant Director of the Mokuryō 木工寮),[2] and his father's name was the same, so it is believed that these two were the same individual.[1][lower-alpha 1]

The Chūyūki records that he was assigned to the Mokunosuke post in Eichō 1 (1096).[1] He appears to have held this position until his death.[1]

According to the Chūyūki, Atsutaka died on the first day of the seventh month of Hōan 1 (27 July 1120).[2]

Descendants

His daughter married Minamoto no Toshiyori,[1] and from this union was born Shun'e.[1]

Poetry

He participated in the Sanka Goban Uta-awase (山家五番歌合) in Tennin 3 (1110).[2] Counting both "Tachibana no Atsutaka" and "Fujiwara no Atsutaka", his name appears in the surviving records of four uta-awase contests from this period.[1] None of his poems, however, were included in any of the court anthologies.[1]

He was also noted for his scholarship,[2] and compiled the 20-volume Ruiju Koshū (類聚古集), a thematically-arranged collection of Man'yōshū poems.[2] Sixteen volumes of the work are extant.[1]

Notes

    1. The Nihon Jinmei Daijiten Plus article on Atsutaka does not go into as much detail on sources, etc., but states that his real clan name was not Fujiwara but Tachibana.[3]
    gollark: Maybe the bees have moved from the network into your computer?
    gollark: And the APIs, mostly.
    gollark: But you can view the blog.
    gollark: Except the experiments, since they use JS.
    gollark: Yes, that is not usable, but the rest works.

    References

    Citations

    Works cited

    • Nishimura, Kayoko (1983). "Fujiwara no Atsutaka" 藤原敦隆. Nihon Koten Bungaku Daijiten 日本古典文学大辞典 (in Japanese). 5. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. p. 267. OCLC 11917421.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
    • "Fujiwara no Atsutaka" 藤原敦隆. Nihon Jinmei Daijiten Plus (in Japanese). Kodansha. 2015. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.