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Intro | Buddhist nun, poets, potter and artist of the 19th century Japan | |
A.K.A. | Otagaki Rengetsu Ōtagaki Nobu Nobu Otagaki Otagaki Nobu Rengetsu Otagaki | |
A.K.A. | Otagaki Rengetsu Ōtagaki Nobu Nobu Otagaki Otagaki Nobu Rengetsu Otagaki | |
Places | Japan | |
was | Poet Artist Painter | |
Work field | Arts Literature | |
Gender |
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Birth | 10 February 1791 | |
Death | 10 December 1875 (aged 84 years) |
Biography
Ōtagaki Rengetsu (太田垣 蓮月, 10 February 1791 – 10 December 1875) was a Buddhist nun who is widely regarded to have been one of the greatest Japanese poets of the 19th century. She was also a skilled potter and painter and expert calligrapher.
Biography
She was the daughter of a courtesan and a nobleman. Born into a samurai family with the surname Tōdō, she was adopted at a young age by the Ōtagaki family. She was a lady in waiting at Kameoka Castle from age 7 to 16, when she was married. She was married twice and had five children.
However, her husband died in 1823. She became a Buddhist nun at the age of thirty after burying both husbands, all of her children, her stepmother and stepbrother. Her adoptive father joined her. Ōtagaki joined the temple Chion-in and became a nun, taking Rengetsu ("Lotus Moon") as her Buddhist name. She remained at Chion-in for nearly ten years, and lived in a number of other temples for the following three decades, until 1865, when she settled at the Jinkō-in where she lived out the rest of her life.
Being a woman, she was only allowed to live in a Buddhist monastery for a couple of years. After that she lived in tiny huts and moved around quite a lot. She was a master of martial arts having been trained since childhood by her adoptive family. The Otagaki family were well known as teachers of ninja.
Though best known as a waka poet, Rengetsu was also accomplished at dance, sewing, some of the martial arts, and Japanese tea ceremony. She admired and studied under a number of great poets including Ozawa Roan and Ueda Akinari, and later in her life became a close friend and mentor to the artist Tomioka Tessai. A number of Tessai's works, though painted by him, feature calligraphy by Rengetsu.
Her ceramic work became so popular it was continued after her death as Rengetsu ware.