Ki no Haseo
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Ki no Haseo | |
|---|---|
A nineteenth century portrait of Ki no Haseo from Zenken Kojitsu by Kikuchi Yōsai. | |
| Native name | 紀長谷雄 |
| Born | 845 |
| Died | 912 |
| Language | Japanese, Chinese |
| Period | Heian |
| Genre | kanshi, waka |
| Notable works | Kikashū |
| Children | Ki no Yoshimochi |
Ki no Haseo (紀長谷雄; 845-912[1]) was a Japanese scholar, poet and diplomat active in the Heian period. He belonged to the Ki clan, which was politically influential in the Nara period, but lost its original position before his birth. He was an acquaintance of poets such as Miyako no Yoshika and Sugawara no Michizane, but was not closely affiliated with any political factions. In 894 he was appointed as a vice-ambassador during preparations to an ultimately canceled mission to China. He remained active as both a scholar and an official through the rest of his life. Many of works have been compiled in the collection Kikashū. While only one chapter survives, multiple poems and prose fragments which originally belonged to it have been identified. A second collection, Zoku Kike Shishū, is entirely lost. It is additionally sometimes proposed that he was also the author of Taketori Monogatari, but this remains uncertain. After his death a number of legends arose around him. Most notably, multiple variants of a tale in which he encounters an oni at Suzakumon are known.
Family background and early life
Haseo was born as a member of the Ki clan, which unlike many other families of Heian period scholars was already considered politically influential in the preceding Nara period, though in the ninth century it was weakened and its members most likely held no hereditary positions.[2] Haseo's father was Ki no Sadanori (紀貞範).[3] Nothing else is known about his close relatives.[2]
As a teenager Haseo studied under Miyako no Yoshika and Ōkura no Yoshiyuki, but his career in the subsequent decade of his life remains poorly known, and he only entered the academy in 876.[3] He became a student of literature.[2] A year later he met Sugawara no Michizane, who remained his close friend through the rest of his life.[3] Over the course of 882 and 883, he was among officials appointed to accompany envoys from Balhae during their stay in the capital and on the journey back to Kaga.[4]
Graduation
In 884 Haseo was declared a graduate student at the recommendation of Michizane, who in his evaluation favorably compared him to Yan Hui, the favorite disciple of Confucius.[5] He was subsequently appointed to the position of secretary of Sanuki; in 886 he was promoted to junior secretary in the Council of State, in 890 to the director of the Bureau of Books and Drawings and in 891 to professor of history and literature.[3] He became a renowned scholar of Chinese literature.[6] His writings indicate he valued the works of Pan Yue and Xie Lingyun, but regarded Wang Bi and He Yan unfavorably.[7]
As a scholar Haseo for the most part abstained from factional disputes, though he was viewed unfavorably by Miyoshi no Kiyoyuki due to positive treatment he received from Michizane.[2] According to an anecdote preserved in the Gōdanshō, Kiyoyuki criticized his appointment to the position of a professor.[3] The same source states that Haseo worried about the Fujiwara clan gaining control over scholarly circles, and that he sided with Miyako no Yoshika during a conflict sparked by Fujiwara no Sukeyo's intent to undergo examination as the first of its members to enter the academy.[8]
Appointment as vice-ambassador to China
In 894 Haseo was supposed to accompany Michizane during a diplomatic mission to China as a vice-ambassador, but this project was canceled at the request of the latter.[9] The reasons behind this decision are unclear,[10] though it is possible the high cost of official missions and the proliferation of contacts with private Chinese traders granting Japan access to luxury goods without the need to send envoys to the continent were among the factors.[11] Furthermore, piracy became a major issue starting with 893.[12] Despite the abandonment of the plans to send him to China, Haseo continued to use the title of vice-ambassador for seven years, presumably due the prestige of this appointment.[13] In 895 as a diplomat he took part in a poetic exchange organized for the ambassador of Balhae.[14]
Later career
In 895 Haseo was appointed a junior assistant head of the Shikibu-shō; a year later he became the head of academy, though he continued to fulfill his duties in the ministry as well, and in 896 was promoted to senior assistant head.[3]
In 903 Michizane entrusted Haseo with his new poem collection, Kanke Kōshū (菅家後集, "The Later Sugawara Collection"), which was entirely written after his exile to Dazaifu.[15] It has been suggested that its popularization in the following years was one of the factors leading to the posthumous rehabilitation of Michizane.[16] Haseo might have also been responsible for interceding with the imperial court on behalf of Michizane's sons.[17]
In 907 Haseo was appointed as the governor of Sanuki.[3] In 908 he participated in the compilation of Engi kyaku (延喜格), a collection of official documents of the daijō-kan and imperial edicts.[18] In 911 he became a middle counselor, and in this capacity acted as one of the advisors of emperor Daigo.[3]
Descendants
Ki no Yoshimochi was Haseo's son.[6] His grandson was Ki no Arimasa, who held the position of a professor of literature.[8] His more distant relatives include Ki no Tsurayuki and Ki no Tomonori, the compilers of the Kokin Wakashū, who belonged to a different branch of the Ki clan.[6]

