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ENSO - DER KREIS The ultimate symbol of Zen art is ... - Wieninger

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K84 Sugawara no Michizane (845-903) , 2. Hälfte 19. Jh.was a scholar, poet, and politician <strong>of</strong> the Heian Period <strong>of</strong> Japan. He <strong>is</strong> regarded as an excellent poet, p<strong>art</strong>icularly in Chinese poetry.He was born into a family <strong>of</strong> letters. Beginning with h<strong>is</strong> grandfather, h<strong>is</strong> family served the court, teaching h<strong>is</strong>tory in the national school for futurebureaucrats. H<strong>is</strong> father began a private school in h<strong>is</strong> mansion and taught students who prepared for the entrance examination to the national schoolor who had ambitions to be <strong>of</strong>ficers <strong>of</strong> the court.Sugawara passed the examination, and entered Daigaku, as the national academy was called in those days. After graduation he began h<strong>is</strong> career inthe court as a scholar. He was also appointed to a position as a government <strong>of</strong>ficial. Sometimes, as a result <strong>of</strong> h<strong>is</strong> Chinese language skill he wasappointed to diplomatic <strong>of</strong>fices, to host foreign embassies. Besides h<strong>is</strong> <strong>of</strong>fices at the court he ran the school h<strong>is</strong> father founded. He was alsoappointed Monjo Hakushi, the highest pr<strong>of</strong>essorial <strong>of</strong>fice at Daigaku. Th<strong>is</strong> <strong>of</strong>fice was considered to be the highest honor a h<strong>is</strong>torian could achieve.At one point, Sugawara lost the favor <strong>of</strong> the court and was appointed to be governor <strong>of</strong> a province. Before that, he had been appointed to such <strong>of</strong>ficesbut it had been only nominally. He lost h<strong>is</strong> <strong>of</strong>fice as pr<strong>of</strong>essor and must have moved to the local province he was appointed to. But when a politicalconflict arose between Emperor Uda and Fujiwara no Mototsune, he sent h<strong>is</strong> opinion to Mototsune, and gained h<strong>is</strong> favor. Though h<strong>is</strong> term asgovernor was not over, he was called back to Kyoto.He was appointed ambassador to China in the 890s, but instead came out in support <strong>of</strong> abolition <strong>of</strong> the imperial embassies to China in 894,theoretically in consideration for the decline <strong>of</strong> the Tang Dynasty. A potential ulterior motive may have lain in Michizane's almost complete ignorance<strong>of</strong> spoken Chinese; most Japanese at the time only read Chinese, and knew little to nothing about the spoken language. Michizane, as the nominatedambassador to China, would have been presented with a potential loss <strong>of</strong> face had he been forced to depend on an interpreter.Sugawara rose to high positions <strong>of</strong> the imperial court under the grace <strong>of</strong> Emperor Uda, but in 901 he fell into a trap <strong>of</strong> h<strong>is</strong> rival Fujiwara no Tokihiraand was demoted to a minor <strong>of</strong>ficial <strong>of</strong> Dazaifu, in Kyushu's Chikuzen Province. After h<strong>is</strong> lonely death, plague and drought spread and sons <strong>of</strong>Emperor Daigo died in succession. <strong>The</strong> Imperial Palace's Great Audience Hall (sh<strong>is</strong>hinden) was struck repeatedly by lightning, and the cityexperienced weeks <strong>of</strong> rainstorms and floods. Attributing th<strong>is</strong> to the angry spirit <strong>of</strong> the exiled Sugawara, the imperial court built a Shinto shrine calledKitano Tenmangu in Kyoto, and dedicated it to him. <strong>The</strong>y posthumously restored h<strong>is</strong> title and <strong>of</strong>fice, and struck from the record any mention <strong>of</strong> h<strong>is</strong>exile. Sugawara was deified as Tenjin-sama, or kami <strong>of</strong> scholarship. Today many Shinto shrines in Japan are dedicated to him.Emperor Uda stopped the practice <strong>of</strong> sending ambassadors to China. <strong>The</strong> emperor's dec<strong>is</strong>ion-making was informed by what he understood aspersuasive counsel from Sugawara Michizane.

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