Difference between revisions of "Matayoshi Baikin"

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(Created page with " Matayoshi Baikin was the personal physician to Prince Ôgimi Chôki, lead ambassador on the 1796 Ryukyuan embassy to Edo. Matayoshi is also said to h...")
 
 
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Matayoshi Baikin was the personal physician to Prince [[Ogimi Choki|Ôgimi Chôki]], lead ambassador on the [[1796]] [[Ryukyuan embassy to Edo]].
 
Matayoshi Baikin was the personal physician to Prince [[Ogimi Choki|Ôgimi Chôki]], lead ambassador on the [[1796]] [[Ryukyuan embassy to Edo]].
  
Matayoshi is also said to have been an accomplished performer of ''[[kudoki bayashi]]'', a dance form which he demonstrated for [[Shimazu Narinobu]], in a performance at which [[Katsuragawa Hoshu|Katsuragawa Hoshû]] was also in attendance.
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Matayoshi is also said to have been an accomplished performer of ''kudoki bayashi'', narrative songs and dances including, for example, the travel songs ''[[Nubui kuduchi]]'' and ''kudai kuduchi''. Matayoshi performed ''kudoki'' ([[Okinawan language|O]]: ''kuduchi'') pieces for [[Shimazu Narinobu]], in a performance at which [[Katsuragawa Hoshu|Katsuragawa Hoshû]] was also in attendance.
  
 
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Latest revision as of 20:23, 28 November 2015

Matayoshi Baikin was the personal physician to Prince Ôgimi Chôki, lead ambassador on the 1796 Ryukyuan embassy to Edo.

Matayoshi is also said to have been an accomplished performer of kudoki bayashi, narrative songs and dances including, for example, the travel songs Nubui kuduchi and kudai kuduchi. Matayoshi performed kudoki (O: kuduchi) pieces for Shimazu Narinobu, in a performance at which Katsuragawa Hoshû was also in attendance.

References

  • William Fleming, “The World Beyond the Walls: Morishima Chūryō (1756-1810) and the Development of Late Edo Fiction,” PhD dissertation, Harvard University (2011), 97.