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138:(木下長嘯子, 1569–1649), to undertake the project. However his dilatory approach, combined with illness, and finally death, impeded his work and the task fell to Keichū, a close friend. The result was the latter's
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His prolific works set a new standard in the study of the classics, though building on recent revivals of interest in the subject. When the
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and reconstructed distinctions in the old
Japanese lexicon based on the earliest texts. In addition to these Keichū wrote the
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109:. After serving as chief priest at Myōhōji, Keichū spent his last years at Enju’an in Kōzu in the Province of
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134:, he commissioned Shimonokōbe Chōryū, heir to the learning of the great poet and Man'yō expert
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region for a while, made his way back to Mount Kōya. Deeply influenced by the thinking of
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However, he disliked the worldly duties of his work and, after wandering around the
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86:, Osaka. It was at this time that he became friends with the poet-scholar
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101:, he also read widely in the Japanese classics under the patronage of
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fief. When he was 13, Keichū left home to become an acolyte of the
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scholarship. In particular, applied methods borrowed from
Chinese
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36:(1640 – April 3, 1701) was a Buddhist priest and a scholar of
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176:) challenged the standard orthographical conventions set by
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154:. He used this hermeneutic to philologically critique
274:. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 110.
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A Treatise on the Proper way to Write
Japanese Words
142:(万葉集大匠記, 1687–1690), which had a profound effect on
44:. Keichū's grandfather was a personal retainer of
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130:, decided to sponsor an edition of the
74:. He subsequently attained the post of
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301:Duke University Press, pp. 49–52.
162:as the indigenous Japanese religion.
13:
360:18th-century Japanese philosophers
355:17th-century Japanese philosophers
315:Japanese writers of the Edo period
271:The Invention of Religion in Japan
14:
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268:Josephson, Jason Ānanda (2012).
105:(伏屋重賢), a patron of the arts in
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1:
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62:sect, studying at Kaijō in
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340:Edo period Buddhist clergy
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330:Japanese Buddhist clergy
186:A Brazen-faced Treatise
335:Shingon Buddhist monks
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345:People from Amagasaki
150:philology with rigid
48:but his father was a
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158:and instead located
90:(下河辺長流, 1624–1686).
297:Susan Burns. 2003.
136:Kinoshita Chōshōshi
299:Before the Nation.
128:Tokugawa Mitsukuni
88:Shimonokōbe Chōryū
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350:Kokugaku scholars
227:Kada no Azumamaro
178:Fujiwara no Teika
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247:Motoori Norinaga
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232:Kamo no Mabuchi
222:Japanese poetry
217:Hirata Atsutane
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140:Man'yō Daishōki
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203:Hyakunin Isshu
190:Kokin Yozaishō
165:Similarly his
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103:Fuseya Shigeta
78:(or Azari) at
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325:1701 deaths
320:1640 births
198:Genchū Shūi
40:in the mid
309:Categories
253:References
200:, and the
184:(厚顔抄 1691
152:empiricism
80:Mount Kōya
42:Edo period
205:Kaikanshō
170:Shōranshō
132:Man'yōshū
56:Amagasaki
54:from the
242:Kokugaku
237:Kaozheng
211:See also
194:Seigodan
182:Kōganshō
156:Buddhism
148:Kaozheng
144:kokugaku
38:Kokugaku
172:(1693:
84:Ikutama
68:Imasato
64:Myōhōji
60:Shingon
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196:, the
192:, the
188:, the
160:Shinto
119:daimyō
111:Settsu
25:Keichū
20:Keichū
99:Kūkai
95:Kinki
76:Ajari
72:Osaka
51:rōnin
276:ISBN
168:Waji
124:Mito
122:of
311::
260:^
207:.
126:,
113:.
70:,
66:,
31:契沖
284:.
34:)
28:(
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