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*''Born: [[1754]]''
*''Died: [[1829]]''
*''Japanese'': 菅江真澄 ''(Sugae Masumi)''
Sugae Masumi was an [[Edo period]] figure known for his writings describing his journey to [[Tohoku|Tôhoku]] and [[Ezo]].
Masumi was born in the countryside outside of [[Nagoya]], in [[1754]]. For reasons which remain largely unknown, he left on a journey in [[1783]], possibly intending from the very beginning to make his way to the island of Ezo (today known as [[Hokkaido|Hokkaidô]]). After much traveling, in [[1788]] he finally found his way across the Tsugaru Strait, to Ezo, where he remained for four years, attempting to learn the language of the [[Ainu]], and to assemble an Ainu-Japanese dictionary. He returned to Honshû (Tôhoku), spending his remaining years in what is today [[Akita prefecture]] (i.e. parts of [[Dewa province|Dewa]] and [[Mutsu province]]s), never returning south to [[Edo]] or Nagoya. He died in [[1829]], leaving numerous diaries full of ''[[waka]]'' poetry, paintings, and descriptions in great detail of people and places.
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==References==
*Wittkamp, Robert. "Between Topos and Topography: Japanese Early Modern Travel Literature." in ''Asian Crossings: Travel Writing on China, Japan and Southeast Asia''. Hong Kong University Press, 2008. pp15-29.
[[Category:Samurai]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]