Line 3: |
Line 3: |
| *''Japanese'': お七火事 ''(Oshichi kaji)'' | | *''Japanese'': お七火事 ''(Oshichi kaji)'' |
| | | |
− | The Great Oshichi Fire of [[1682]] was a disaster which began when a young woman known as Yaoya Oshichi started a fire in order to enable her to meet with her lover again; the fire spread and in the end destroyed a large section of downtown [[Edo]]. | + | The Great Oshichi Fire of [[1682]] was a disaster which began when a young woman known as Yaoya Oshichi started a fire in order to enable her to meet with her lover Sahei again; the fire spread and in the end destroyed a large section of downtown [[Edo]]. |
| | | |
− | Oshichi, 17, was sentenced to public execution. | + | Oshichi, 17, was sentenced to public execution, and is buried at [[Enjo-ji|Enjô-ji]] in what is now the Hongô area of Tokyo. |
| | | |
− | But dramatized versions of her story very soon came to be told by street musicians and storytellers. [[Ihara Saikaku]] published a version of her story, entitled ''Yaoya Monogatari'' ("The Tale of Yaoya") in [[1686]], and a [[kabuki]] production called ''[[Oshichi Utasaiban]]'' came to be performed in Osaka.
| + | Dramatized versions of her story very soon came to be told in ''[[rakugo]]'' and by other sorts of street musicians and storytellers. [[Ihara Saikaku]] published a version of her story, entitled ''Yaoya Monogatari'' ("The Tale of Yaoya") in [[1686]], and a [[kabuki]] production called ''[[Oshichi Utasaiban]]'' came to be performed in Osaka. |
| | | |
| The shogunate soon afterwards (in 1686) issued an ordinance against rumors, songs, published materials, and the like relating to recent events. | | The shogunate soon afterwards (in 1686) issued an ordinance against rumors, songs, published materials, and the like relating to recent events. |
| | | |
| ==References== | | ==References== |
− | *Ikegami, Eiko. ''Bonds of Civility: Aesthetic Networks and the Political Origins of Japanese Culture''. Cambridge University Press, 2005. pp307-308. | + | *Ikegami, Eiko. ''Bonds of Civility: Aesthetic Networks and the Political Origins of Japanese Culture''. Cambridge University Press, 2005. pp307-308. |
| + | *Plaque outside University of Tokyo, in the vicinity of Enjô-ji Temple.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15800690658/sizes/k/] |
| | | |
| [[Category:Edo Period]] | | [[Category:Edo Period]] |
| [[Category:Events and Incidents]] | | [[Category:Events and Incidents]] |