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Banzuke : ウィキペディア英語版
Banzuke
''This article is about the banzuke document, for a list of wrestlers as ranked on an actual banzuke see List of active sumo wrestlers''
A , officially called is a document listing the rankings of professional sumo wrestlers published before each official tournament or ''honbasho''. The term can also refer to the rankings themselves. The document is normally released about two weeks before the tournament begins. On the ''banzuke'' wrestlers are divided into East, which is printed on the right, and West, which is printed on the left. Each wrestler's full ''shikona'' (ring name), hometown and rank is also listed. The top of the page starts with the highest ranked ''makuuchi'' wrestlers printed in the largest characters, down to the wrestlers in the lowest divisions which are written in much smaller characters. The names of ''gyōji'' (sumo referees), ''yobidashi'' (ushers/handymen), ''shimpan'' (judges), ''oyakata'' (elders of the Japan Sumo Association), and occasionally ''tokoyama'' (hairdressers) are also listed.
While not as old as sumo itself, the form and production of this document can be traced as far back as 1761, and has been a defining component of sumo for centuries. As is the traditional Japanese style, a ''banzuke'' is meant to be read right to left, top to bottom. It is considered a collector's item by sumo fans.
==Banzuke preparation==

The rankings on the ''banzuke'' are decided by an assembly composed of 20 sumo judges (''shimpan'') and three supervisors who gather a few days after each official tournament. The assembly assigns ranks to over 600 wrestlers in six divisions based on their performance in the previous tournament. There are no precise rules for assigning rank, but the general rule is that a wrestler who achieved ''kachi-koshi'' (a majority of wins) will be raised in the rankings and a wrestler with a ''make-koshi'' (a majority of losses) will be lowered in the rankings. The degree of a wrestler's success or failure will help give the assembly a benchmark for figuring how far he rises or falls in the rankings.
High-ranking ''gyōji'' then take on the laborious task of copying down the new rankings on a traditional Japanese paper roll called a ''maki''. They carefully write down the ''kanji'' characters of each wrestler participating in a tournament in a calligraphy style called sumo ''moji''. The work is very intricate and requires a great deal of skill. It usually takes about a week to complete the document. The ''banzuke'' information is carefully guarded for several weeks before it is released, which is usually on the Monday 13 days before an official tournament begins.〔
The ''banzuke'' is printed at a greatly reduced size on sheets of paper (58 cm x 44 cm) and copies are distributed by the Japan Sumo Association. Sumo stables buy a large quantity of them to give to their sponsors. Tea houses in the Tokyo sumo venue Kokugikan also buy them to give out to their patrons. They are also available for purchase for a small fee at tournament sites.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Banzuke」の詳細全文を読む



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