Kamo no Yasunori

Kamo no Yasunori
Religion Onmyōdō
Personal
Born 917
Japan
Died 977 (aged 5960)
Japan
Senior posting
Based in Japan - Japan
Title Onmyōji
Religious career
Post Onmyōji - adviser to the Emperor on the spiritually correct way to deal with issues.
In this Japanese name, the family name is Kamo.

Kamo no Yasunori (賀茂 保憲) was an onmyōji, a practitioner of onmyōdō, during the Heian period in Japan. He was considered the premier onmyōji of his time.[1][2]

Yasunori was the son of the onmyōji Kamo no Tadayuki (賀茂 忠行). According to a tale in the Konjaku Monogatarishu, at the age of ten, Yasunori accompanied his father to an exorcism, where he was able to perceive the demons — a sign of talent, for, unlike Tadayuki, Yasunori was capable of doing so without formal training.[3]

He later taught Abe no Seimei the art of onmyōdō. Seimei became his successor in astrology and divination, while Yasunori's son succeeded him in the creation of the calendar, a lesser task.[4][5] For several centuries afterward, the Abe clan controlled the government ministry of onmyōdō, while the Kamo clan became hereditary keepers of the calendar.[6]

Yasunori's second daughter became an acclaimed poet.

Yasunori's death is a driving plot element in the kabuki play Ashiya Dōman Ōuchi Kagami (A Courtly Mirror of Ashiya Dōman). In the play, he is the owner of the Kin'u Gyokuto Shū, a book of divination passed down from a Chinese wizard. He intends to marry his adopted daughter to his disciple Abe no Yasuna (安倍保名), the father of Abe no Seimei, and to give the book to him, but he dies before doing so. This sets the stage for a conflict between Ashiya Michitaru (as Dōman is called in the play) and Abe no Yasuna over ownership of the book.[7]

References

  1. Groner, Paul. Ryōgen and Mount Hiei: Japanese Tendai in the tenth century. Hawaii: Kuroda Institute/University of Hawai'i Press, 2002. 103. (ISBN 0-8248-2260-9)
  2. Tyler, Royall. Japanese Tales. New York: Pantheon Press, 1987.
  3. Li, Michelle Ilene Osterfeld. Ambiguous bodies: reading the grotesque in Japanese setsuwa tales. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009. 151-152. (ISBN 978-0-8047-5975-5)
  4. Mikami, Yoshio. "The Development of Mathematics in China and Japan." Abhandlungen zur Geschichte der mathematischen Wissenschaften mit Einschluss ihrer Anwendungen. Volume XXX. 1913. 179.
  5. Goff, Janet. Conjuring Kuzunoha from the World of Abe no Seimei. A Kabuki Reader: History and Performance, ed. Samuel L. Leiter. New York: M. E. Sharpe, 2001. 271. (ISBN 0-7656-0704-2)
  6. Itō, Satoshi. Shinto — a Short History. New York: RourledgeCurzon, 2003. 98. (ISBN 0-415-31179-9)
  7. Goff, Janet. Conjuring Kuzunoha from the World of Abe no Seimei. A Kabuki Reader: History and Performance, ed. Samuel L. Leiter. New York: M. E. Sharpe, 2001. 276-279. (ISBN 0-7656-0704-2)


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.