Toda Mosui
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Jump to navigationJump to searchToda Mosui was a prominent tanka poet and literary critic of the Genroku period.
The sixth son of Watanabe Kenmotsu Tadashi, a Tokugawa retainer based at Sunpu castle, he took on the name Toda when adopted by his uncle, Toda Masatsugu, following his father's death. Toda would later take on a variety of other names, including his birth name Hyô, adult names Yasumitsu and Moemon, and art-names Mosui and Rokanken.
Mosui served the lord of Okazaki han for a time, and later took the tonsure and became a Buddhist priest, living in the area near Sensô-ji in the Asakusa neighborhood of Edo.
Mosui's works included Murasaki no hitomoto, Wakaba, and Nashimoto-shû.
He died in 1706, and was buried at Sensô-ji.
References
- Plaques on-site at Mosui's grave, at Sensô-ji, Asakusa, Tokyo.[1]