Murakami Kijō

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Murakami Kijō

Murakami Kijō ( Japanese 村上 鬼城 ; * Keiō 1/5/17 (Gregorian June 10, 1865 ) in Edo (today: Tokyo ); † September 17, 1938 ) was a Japanese poet.

Murakami lost his hearing as a child and was unable to pursue a career in military or civil service. From 1873 he lived with his family in Takasaki . Here he began to write poetry and became a student of Masaoka Shiki and Takahama Kyoshi . He joined the group around Masaoka and worked on their haiku magazine Hototogisu . In 1917 he published the haiku collection Kijō kushū . The two volumes of poetry Teihon Kijō kushū (1940) and Kijō haiku hairon-shū (1947) were published posthumously .

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Individual evidence

  1. Tsuchiya Bunmei Kinengakkan ( 土屋 文明 記念 分 学 館 ) of Gunma Prefecture ( Gunma Prefectural Museum of Literature in Commemoration of Bunmei-Tsuchiya ): 閲 覧 室 ミ ニ 展示 「村上 鬼城 関係 新 収 蔵 資料 紹 介」 ( Memento of the original from 21 February 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.bungaku.pref.gunma.jp