Nijō TameujiNijō Tameuji (二条為氏, 1222–1286), also known as Fujiwara no Tameuji (藤原為氏), was a Japanese courtier and waka poet of the mid-Kamakura period. His Dharma name was Kakua (覚阿). BiographyAncestry, birth and early lifeNijō Tameuji was born in 1222.[1] His father was Fujiwara no Tameie,[2] and his mother was a daughter of Utsunomiya Yoritsuna.[1] He was Tameie's eldest son,[3] and a grandson of Fujiwara no Teika.[4] He was not known as Nijō in his early life; he received this moniker from his son Tameyo.[5] Political careerAt the height of his political career, he had attained the Senior Second Rank,[1] and held the position of Provisional Major Counselor (gon-dainagon).[2] Later life and deathHe entered Buddhist orders in 1285,[6] acquiring the Dharma name Kakua.[6] He died on 3 October 1286, or the fourteenth day of the ninth month of Kōan 9.[6] DescendantsHe was the father of Nijō Tameyo,[1] Nijō Tamezane[3] and Nijō Jōi.[3] PoetryTameuji learned waka composition from his father Tameie and his grandfather Teika, who between them had compiled three of the imperial anthologies.[5] He was the founder of the conservative Nijō poetic school.[4] In 1247, he took part in the Hyakusanjū-ban Uta-awase (百三十番歌合),[6] and the following year in the Hōji Hyakushu (宝治百首).[6] In 1278,[3] on the command of Retired Emperor Kameyama,[1] he compiled the Shokushūi Wakashū.[2] He may have also compiled the Shin Wakashū,[7] although other theories as to its compiler's identity have been proposed.[8] As the heir to the prestigious Mikohidari house, he was a central figure of the waka society of his day.[6] His disagreements with his brother Tamenori and stepmother Abutsu-ni, however, gave rise to the split between the Nijō, Kyōgoku and Reizei poetic schools,[6] the latter two of which were founded by his brothers Tamenori and Tamesuke, respectively.[3] He had a bitter dispute with his stepmother over valuable manuscripts related to the waka traditions, as well as the inheritance of his father's landholdings.[9] Among his most famous poems is the following,[6] which was included in the Shokugosen Wakashū, compiled by his father Tameie.[6]
He left a private collection, the Dainagon Tameuji-kyō Shū (大納言為氏卿集),[2] which collects the poems of both Tameuji himself and his son Tameyo.[1] References
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