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・ Mushabian culture
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Mushakōjisenke
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Mushakōjisenke : ウィキペディア英語版
Mushakōjisenke

, sometimes referred to as Mushanokōjisenke, is a school of Japanese tea ceremony. Along with Urasenke and Omotesenke, the Mushakōjisenke is one of the three lines of the Sen family descending from Sen Rikyū, which together are known as the san-Senke or "three Sen houses/families" (三千家). The head or ''iemoto'' of this line carries the hereditary name Sōshu (宗守).
Mushakōjisenke is associated with Sen Rikyū's great-grandson , who was the second to the oldest of Sen Sōtan's four sons. Like his older brother, he was Sōtan's son by Sōtan's first wife, and through much of his life he lived apart from the Sen house. During this time, he became a lacquer artisan. At the behest of his younger brothers, however, he set up his own tea house, called the Kankyū-an, on Mushakōji street, and became devoted to practicing and teaching the Way of Tea.〔"Senke to Kankyū-an no rekishi" in (Mushakōjisenke official website ). Accessed August 8, 2008.〕
Ichiō Sōshu was appointed tea teacher to the Matsudaira clan in Takamatsu, Sanuki province. Until the Meiji Restoration, the family heir through the generations was in service to the Matsudaira of Takamatsu.
==Generations==


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「Mushakōjisenke」の詳細全文を読む



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