Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 24, 2026

Sengaku

Sengaku was a Japanese Buddhist monk of the Tendai school. He was a scholar, editor and a literary critic.

Last revised
Jun 24, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
189 w
Citations
3
Source
Sengaku
TitleBuddhist monk
Personal life
Born1203
Diedcirca 1273
Religious life
ReligionBuddhism
SchoolTendai

Sengaku (仙覚; 1203 – c. 1273) was a Japanese Buddhist monk of the Tendai school. He was a scholar, editor and a literary critic.1

His major work, Man'yōshū chūshaku, was completed in 1269. This was a treatise on the collected poems in the Man'yōshū anthology.1 His work was instrumental in a process of rediscovering the original meaning of this seminal work of Japanese poetry.

Selected work

Sengaku's published writings encompass 9 works in 12 publications in 1 language and 53 library holdings.2

  • Man'ʼyōshū chūshaku (萬葉集註釋) (1269); Man'ʼyōshū chūshaku: Sengaku shō, Ninnaji zō (萬葉集註釋: 仙覺抄, 仁和寺藏) Akihiro Satake, ed. (1981). ISBN 9784653005889; OCLC 23315980
  • Man'yōshū (萬葉集) (1709) OCLC 069224675
Notes

Notes

  1. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric et al. (2005). "Senkaku" in Japan encyclopedia, p. 842., p. 842, at Google Books; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum, see Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File Deprecated link archived 2012-05-24 at archive.today.
  2. WorldCat Identities: 仙覚 b. 1203
References

References

Further reading

Further reading

  • Shimura, Shirō. (1999). Sanetomo, Sengaku : Kamakura kadan no kenkyū (実朝・仙覚: 鎌倉歌壇の研究). Tōkyo: Shintensha,