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Hagakure

A Wisdom Archive on Hagakure

Hagakure

A selection of articles related to Hagakure

We recommend this article: Hagakure - 1, and also this: Hagakure - 2.
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hagakure, Hagakure, Hagakure - Reference

ARTICLES RELATED TO Hagakure

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Budo

Budo (武道) is a term for Japanese martial arts. Traditional budo (from before the Meiji Restoration) is often referred to as koryu bujutsu, while more modern budo arts are called gendai budo. Budo is a compound of the kanji 武 (bu)—meaning war, warrior, fight, or fighter—and 道 (do)— meaning path or way. Similarly, Bujutsu is a coumpound of the kanji characters 武 (bu) and 術 ...

Read more here: » Budo: Encyclopedia - Budo

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - William Scott Wilson
William Scott Wilson (b. 1944 in Nashville, Tennessee) is known for translating several works of Japanese literature, mostly those relating to the martial tradition of that country. William Scott Wilson - Translated Works. Go Rin no Sho (The Book of Five Rings) by Miyamoto Musashi Hagakure (Hidden in the Leaves, among other common translations) by Yamamoto Tsunetomo The Unfettered Mind by Takuan Soho ...

Including:

Read more here: » William Scott Wilson: Encyclopedia - William Scott Wilson

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Shudo - Cultural aspects

The teachings of shudo, "The Way of the Young," entered the literary tradition and can be found in such as works as Hagakure, "Hidden by Leaves," and other samurai manuals. Shudo, in its pedagogic, martial, and aristocratic aspects, is closely analogous to the ancient Greek tradition of pederasty. The practice was held in high esteem, and was encouraged, especially within the samurai class. It was considered beneficial for the youth, teaching him virtue, honesty and the appreciation of beauty. Its value was contrasted with the love of w ...

See also:

Shudo, Shudo - Origins, Shudo - Cultural aspects

Read more here: » Shudo: Encyclopedia II - Shudo - Cultural aspects

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Bushido

Japanese samurai in armour, 1860s. Photograph by Felice Beato. Bushido (Japanese: 武士道; bushidō, "way of the warrior"), is a way of life, somewhat analogous to the European concept of chivalry. It includes elements of a philosophy, except that is it generally not textual in nature, and it involves, but is not equivalent to, a code of conduct. Bushido developed between the 11th to 14th centuries and was formalized during the opening years of the Tokugawa shogunate for the members of the Samurai class. According to t ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bushido: Encyclopedia - Bushido

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - History

In the year 1256 CE, the Shogunal Deputy in Kyoto, Hojo Shigetoki (1198-1261 CE) wrote a letter to his son and house elders of his clan. The letter, now known as "The Message Of Master Gokurakuji," emphasized the importance of loyalty to one's master: When one is serving officially or in the master's court, he should not think of a hundred or a thousand people, but should consider only the importance of the master. Nor should he draw the line at his own life or anything else he considers valuable. Even if the master is being phlegmatic and one goes unrecognized, he should know that he will surely have the divine protect ...

See also:

Bushido, Bushido - History, Bushido - Bushido ethics, Bushido - Seven virtues associated with bushido, Bushido - Major figures associated with bushido

Read more here: » Bushido: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - History

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - Bushido ethics

Bushido expanded and formalized the earlier code of the samurai, and stressed frugality, loyalty, mastery of martial arts, and honor to the death. Under the Bushido ideal, if a samurai failed to uphold his honor he could regain it by performing seppuku (ritual suicide). In an excerpt from the chapter "AN ACCOUNT OF THE HARA-KIRI" in Mitford's "Tales of Old Japan", the author describes a friend witnessing an act of Seppuku: "There are many stories on record of extraordinary heroism being displayed in the hara-kiri. The case of a young ...

See also:

Bushido, Bushido - History, Bushido - Bushido ethics, Bushido - Seven virtues associated with bushido, Bushido - Major figures associated with bushido

Read more here: » Bushido: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - Bushido ethics

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - History

"One should have restraint and deep sympathy in all things." In the year 1256, the Shogunal Deputy in Kyoto, Hojo Shigetoki (1198-1261) wrote a letter to his son and house elders of his clan. The letter, now known as "The Message Of Master Gokurakuji," emphasized the importance of loyalty to one's master: When one is serving officially or in the master's court, he should not think of a hundred or a thousand people, but should consider only the importance of the master. Nor should he draw the line at his own life or anythi ...

See also:

Bushido, Bushido - History, Bushido - Bushido ethics, Bushido - Seven virtues associated with bushido, Bushido - Major figures associated with bushido

Read more here: » Bushido: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - History

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - Bushido ethics

Bushido expanded and formalized the earlier code of the samurai, and stressed frugality, loyalty, mastery of martial arts, and honor to the death. Under the Bushido ideal, if a samurai failed to uphold his honor he could regain it by performing seppuku (ritual suicide). In an excerpt from the chapter "AN ACCOUNT OF THE HARA-KIRI" in Mitford's "Tales of Old Japan", the author describes a friend witnessing an act of Seppuku: "There are many stories on record of extraordinary heroism being displayed in the hara-kiri. The case of a ...

See also:

Bushido, Bushido - History, Bushido - Bushido ethics, Bushido - Seven virtues associated with bushido, Bushido - Major figures associated with bushido

Read more here: » Bushido: Encyclopedia II - Bushido - Bushido ethics

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Okuma Shigenobu - Early life

He was born Hachitaro, the first son of an artillery officer, in Saga (then part of Hizen Province) in 1838. During his early years, his education consisted mainly of the study of Chinese Confucian literature and derivative works such as Hagakure. However, he left school in 1853 to move to a Dutch studies institution. The Dutch school was merged with the provincial school in 1861, and Okuma took up a lecturing position there shortly afterward. Okuma sympathized with the sonnō jōi movement occurring around that time, and advocated mediation between ...

See also:

Okuma Shigenobu, Okuma Shigenobu - Early life, Okuma Shigenobu - Meiji period political life, Okuma Shigenobu - Taisho period political life

Read more here: » Okuma Shigenobu: Encyclopedia II - Okuma Shigenobu - Early life

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H

H-2A rocket, H2, Habikino, Habu, Hachikai, Aichi, Hachiman, Hachinohe, Aomori, Hachinohe Station, Hachioji, Tokyo, Hadaka Apron, Hadano, Kanagawa, Haebaru, Okinawa, Haga, Hyogo, Hagakure, Hagi, Yamaguchi, Hagiwara Sakutaro, Haguri District, Aichi, Haguro, Haibane Renmei, Haibara District, Shizuoka, Haibara, Nara, Haibara, Shizuoka, Haiku, Hajime Sorayama, Hakata, Hakata Minami Line, Hakata Station, Hakata-men, Hakata, Ehime, Haki, Fukuoka, Hakko Ryu, Hakodate Airport, Hakodate, Hokkaido, Hakone, Hakone-Tozan Line, Haku, Hakui, Hakusan, Mie, ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Samurai

Samurai (侍 or 士, samurai?) was a term for the military nobility in pre-industrial Japan. Samurai - Myth and reality. Most samurai were bou ...

Including:

Read more here: » Samurai: Encyclopedia - Samurai

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Cowboy Bebop

Please remove this notice after the article has been expanded. Details are on this talk page or at Wikipedia:Requests for expansion. Cowboy Bebop (Japanese: カウボーイビバップ, but most often written in English, even in Japan) is an anime series directed by Shinichiro Watanabe that initially ran starting in 1998. The show was quite popular in Japan and has also been widely popular in the United States, often credited with significantly broadening the popularity o ...

Including:

Read more here: » Cowboy Bebop: Encyclopedia - Cowboy Bebop

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Yamamoto Tsunetomo

Tsunetomo Yamamoto (12 June 1659 - 1719) was a samurai of the Saga domain in Hizen Province under his lord Mitsushige Nabeshima. For thirty years Yamamoto devoted his life to the service of his lord and clan. When Nabeshima died in 1700, Yamamoto did not commit tsuifuku because Mitsushige Nabeshima has expressed a dislike of the practice in his life, so Yamamoto considered it better to follow his lord's wishes after his death, and to refrain from tsuifuku. After some disagreements with Nabeshima's successor, Yamamoto renounced the wor ...

Including:

Read more here: » Yamamoto Tsunetomo: Encyclopedia - Yamamoto Tsunetomo

Hagakure: Encyclopedia - Samurai

Samurai (侍 or 士, samurai?) was a term for the military nobility in pre-industrial Japan. Samurai - Myth and reality. Most samurai were bou ...

Including:

Read more here: » Samurai: Encyclopedia - Samurai

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Samurai - History

Samurai - Origin of Samurai. Before the Heian period, the army in Japan was modeled after the Chinese army and under the direct command of the emperor. Except for slaves, every able-bodied man had the duty of enlisting for the army. These men had to supply themselves, and many gave up returning and settled down on their way home. This was treated as a part of taxation and it could be substituted with other forms of tax such as bolts of cloth. These men were called Sakimori (防人, lit. "defenders"), b ...

See also:

Samurai, Samurai - Myth and reality, Samurai - History, Samurai - Origin of Samurai, Samurai - Kamakura Bakufu and the Rise of Samurai, Samurai - Ashikaga Shogunate and the Feudal Period, Samurai - Oda Toyotomi and Tokugawa, Samurai - Tokugawa Shogunate, Samurai - Samurai decline during the Meiji Restoration, Samurai - Post Meiji Restoration, Samurai - Culture, Samurai - Education, Samurai - Shūdō, Samurai - Lifestyles, Samurai - Samurai Names, Samurai - Marriage, Samurai - Succession, Samurai - Philosophy, Samurai - Weapons, Samurai - Etymology of samurai and related words, Samurai - Samurai in popular culture

Read more here: » Samurai: Encyclopedia II - Samurai - History

Hagakure: The Way of the Samurai: Encyclopedia II - Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai - Soundtrack

The film's score and soundtrack is produced by the Wu-Tang Clan's RZA. This film may be considered his breakout work in movie scoring, after which he moved on to Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill franchise, Blade: Trinity, and other movies. Several North American and Japanese versions of the soundtrack album have been released, each with a slightly different set of tracks. Scenes in the film play partial songs not appearing in the released soundtrack albums, including From Then Till Now performed by Killah Priest, Armagid ...

See also:

Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai - Soundtrack, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai - Literature referenced in the film

Read more here: » Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai: Encyclopedia II - Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai - Soundtrack

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Japanese funeral - Modern funerals

Japanese funeral - After death. While Japan has a mixture of Shinto and Buddhist beliefs, funerals are almost always Buddhist ceremonies, and 90% of the funerals are Buddhist style. After death, the deceased's lips are moisted with water, in a ceremony called "Water of the last moment" Matsugo-no-mizu. The household shrine is closed and covered with a white paper, to keep out the impure spirits of the dead. This is called Kamidana-fuji. A small table decorated with flowers, incense, and a candle are placed next to the deceased's bed. A knife may be put on t ...

See also:

Japanese funeral, Japanese funeral - Modern funerals, Japanese funeral - After death, Japanese funeral - Wake, Japanese funeral - Funeral, Japanese funeral - Cremation, Japanese funeral - Graves, Japanese funeral - Memorial services, Japanese funeral - Japanese funeral industry, Japanese funeral - History, Japanese funeral - Death-related words in Japanese, Japanese funeral - Trivia

Read more here: » Japanese funeral: Encyclopedia II - Japanese funeral - Modern funerals

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A

A City With No People, A Personal Matter, A.I. Love You, Aba, Okayama, Abashiri, Hokkaido, Abashiri subprefecture, ABCL/1, ABCL/R, ABCL/R2, Abe clan of Mikawa, Abe Hiroshi, Abe Iso, Abe Kobo, Abe Masakatsu, Abe no Hirafu, Abe no Seimei, Abe Nobuyuki, Abe Yutaka, Abe River, Abe Shintaro, Abenobashi Magical Shopping District, Abh, Abiko, Chiba, Abolition of the han system, Abu District, Yamaguchi, Abu, Yamaguchi, Abukuma River, Abura kiri Acala, ActRaiser, Acura, AD Police, Adachi clan, Adachi Kagemori, Adachi Morinaga, Adachi, Tokyo, A ...

See also:

List of Japan-related topics 123-K, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - 123, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - B, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - C, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - D, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - E, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - F, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - G, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - H, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - I, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - J, List of Japan-related topics 123-K - K

Read more here: » List of Japan-related topics 123-K: Encyclopedia II - List of Japan-related topics 123-K - A

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Death In June - Symbolism and aesthetics

Death In June has always used symbolism, in lyrics and aesthetic approaches. Often times, these symbols are sometimes slightly modified European historical or ancestral symbols or point to general areas of time, with a small 6 applied. Death In June - Masks. According to Pearce, since it's inception, Death In June "did not want to become a part of a normal rock n'roll thing. Pretty boys staring into the cameras with huge cock ...

See also:

Death In June, Death In June - Crisis, Death In June - Early Death In June 1981-1985, Death In June - Live debut, Death In June - Introduction of folk music, Death In June - Tony Wakeford departs, Death In June - Nada! flirtation with dance music, Death In June - Patrick Leagas departs, Death In June - Mid-period Death In June 1985-1996, Death In June - Creation of World Serpent Distribution, Death In June - Collaboration with David Tibet, Death In June - Collaboration with Boyd Rice begins, Death In June - Collaboration with Erik Konofal, Death In June - Collaboration with John Murphy begins, Death In June - Contemporary Death In June 1996-present, Death In June - Collaboration With Albin Julius, Death In June - Demise of World Serpent Distribution, Death In June - Collaboration With Andreas Ritter, Death In June - Collaboration With Boyd Rice ends, Death In June - Neofolk music, Death In June - Influences, Death In June - Literary, Death In June - Musical, Death In June - Film, Death In June - Symbolism and aesthetics, Death In June - Masks, Death In June - Camouflage, Death In June - Totenkopf-6, Death In June - Whip-Hand, Death In June - Three Bars, Death In June - Runes, Death In June - The origins of the name, Death In June - Controversy, Death In June - Censored in Lausanne Switzerland, Death In June - Censored in Chicago Illinois, Death In June - Discography, Death In June - Albums And EPs, Death In June - Compilations, Death In June - Reference

Read more here: » Death In June: Encyclopedia II - Death In June - Symbolism and aesthetics

Hagakure: Encyclopedia II - Cowboy Bebop - Characters

Cowboy Bebop - Spike Spiegel. A 27-year-old bounty hunter who was born on Mars. In appearance, Spike is tall and thin, but with muscular shoulders. He has dark green fuzzy hair, and brown eyes, one of which is lighter than the other. This is due to a cybernetic prosthetic replacement for the eye that he "lost in an accident." He is usually dressed in a blue leisure suit, with a yellow shirt and Lupin III inspired boots. Spike also usually has a cigarette between his lips, so ...

See also:

Cowboy Bebop, Cowboy Bebop - History of Bebop, Cowboy Bebop - Plot, Cowboy Bebop - Background, Cowboy Bebop - Characters, Cowboy Bebop - Spike Spiegel, Cowboy Bebop - Jet Black, Cowboy Bebop - Faye Valentine, Cowboy Bebop - Edward Wong Hau Pepelu Tivrusky IV, Cowboy Bebop - Ein, Cowboy Bebop - Vicious, Cowboy Bebop - Julia, Cowboy Bebop - Punch and Judy, Cowboy Bebop - The Three Old Men, Cowboy Bebop - Sessions episodes, Cowboy Bebop - Soundtrack, Cowboy Bebop - Staff, Cowboy Bebop - Influences, Cowboy Bebop - Controversial episodes, Cowboy Bebop - Content ratings, Cowboy Bebop - Longevity

Read more here: » Cowboy Bebop: Encyclopedia II - Cowboy Bebop - Characters

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