Fujiwara no Yoritada
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Fujiwara no Yoritada (藤原 頼忠; 924 - 989), the second son of Saneyori, was a kugyo (high-ranked Japanese noble) who served as regent for Emperor En'yū and Emperor Kazan. His mother was a daughter of Fujiwara no Tokihira. His elder brother from the same mother Atsutoshi died before father's death. In 977 He became Sadaijin, and when his cousin regent Fujiwara no Kanemichi was into a critical condition, Kanemichi ceded Kampaku (regent) to Yoritada, because Kanemichi rivaled Kanemichi's brother Kaneie. Although his two daughters were consorts of Emperor En'yū and Emperor Kazan, they couldn't have any sons. Yoritada had not so close blood relationship with Emperors. His cousin Kaneie was the grandfather of Crown Prince Yasuhito (Emperor Ichijō), and he encouraged Emperor Kazan to abdicate a throne. By the accession of Emperor Ichijō, He retired from Kampaku and Kaneie became Sessho (regent) for Kaneie's grandson Emperor Ichijō. Yoritada was Daijō Daijin since 978, and he is referred to as Rengi-kō (廉義公) (posthumous name as Daijō Daijin).
His poet son Fujiwara no Kintō compiled the Shūi Wakashū, and also a collection of Chinese verse and prose (~600 selections) and 25 Japanese poems in his Wakan Rōeishū (和漢朗詠集), a widely-admired collection that helped spread the influence of Chinese culture (and especially the poetry of Bai Juyi) in the Japanese Imperial court. Kintō's collection would be imitated by a successor, Fujiwara no Mototoshi's Shinsen Rōeishū (新撰朗詠集). Kintō also wrote an influential critical guide to incorporating Bai Juyi's poetic techniques (and more generally, T'ang dynasty poetry) into Japanese poetry called Shinsen Zuinō (新撰髄脳) ("The Essence of Poetry Newly Selected").
[edit] References
- pg. 483 and 181-183 of Japanese Court Poetry, Earl Miner, Robert H. Brower. 1961, Stanford University Press, LCCN 61-10925
- Nihonshi Shoka Keizu Jimmei Jiten, Owada,T. et al. 2003, Kodansya. (Japanese)
- Ōkagami, Hosaka,H.(translation into modern Japanese) 1981, Kodansya. (Japanese)