Difference between revisions of "Matsuura Kasho"
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Matsuura Kashô was a Confucian scholar in service to [[Tsushima han]]. Originally from [[Himeji han]], he studied under [[Kinoshita Jun'an]], and supported [[Amenomori Hoshu|Amenomori Hôshû]] in critiquing certain of [[Arai Hakuseki|Arai Hakuseki's]] policies (especially regarding the [[Korean embassies to Edo]]). | Matsuura Kashô was a Confucian scholar in service to [[Tsushima han]]. Originally from [[Himeji han]], he studied under [[Kinoshita Jun'an]], and supported [[Amenomori Hoshu|Amenomori Hôshû]] in critiquing certain of [[Arai Hakuseki|Arai Hakuseki's]] policies (especially regarding the [[Korean embassies to Edo]]). | ||
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+ | His literary writings were known to some extent among elites in Korea. When Matsuura met with Korean envoys in [[1719]], [[Cho Taeok]] (lead envoy on the [[1711]] mission) praised him for his writings, to which Matsuura responded with surprise that they should have heard of him. Incidentally, Matsuura did not speak or understand [[Korean language]], and communicated with the Koreans either through Amenomori, who served as interpreter, or through writing in [[classical Chinese]], which both sides understood.<ref>Lee, 144-145.</ref> | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
*Lee Jeong Mi, "Cultural Expressions of Tokugawa Japan and Choson Korea: An Analysis of the Korean Embassies in the Eighteenth Century," PhD dissertation, University of Toronto (2008), 85n18. | *Lee Jeong Mi, "Cultural Expressions of Tokugawa Japan and Choson Korea: An Analysis of the Korean Embassies in the Eighteenth Century," PhD dissertation, University of Toronto (2008), 85n18. | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Scholars and Philosophers]] | [[Category:Scholars and Philosophers]] | ||
[[Category:Edo Period]] | [[Category:Edo Period]] |
Revision as of 11:47, 23 August 2017
Matsuura Kashô was a Confucian scholar in service to Tsushima han. Originally from Himeji han, he studied under Kinoshita Jun'an, and supported Amenomori Hôshû in critiquing certain of Arai Hakuseki's policies (especially regarding the Korean embassies to Edo).
His literary writings were known to some extent among elites in Korea. When Matsuura met with Korean envoys in 1719, Cho Taeok (lead envoy on the 1711 mission) praised him for his writings, to which Matsuura responded with surprise that they should have heard of him. Incidentally, Matsuura did not speak or understand Korean language, and communicated with the Koreans either through Amenomori, who served as interpreter, or through writing in classical Chinese, which both sides understood.[1]
References
- Lee Jeong Mi, "Cultural Expressions of Tokugawa Japan and Choson Korea: An Analysis of the Korean Embassies in the Eighteenth Century," PhD dissertation, University of Toronto (2008), 85n18.
- ↑ Lee, 144-145.