|
. This name indicates the iemoto of the Omotesenke line of the three Sen families/houses (san-Senke), whose common family founder is Sen Rikyū. Sen is the family name; Sōsa is the hereditary name of the iemoto in this line. The first in the line to use the hereditary name was Sen Rikyū's great-grandson, known as Kōshin Sōsa (1613–1672), the third son of Sen Sōtan, who inherited the main house in Kyoto from his father, Sōtan, and thus became the first generation in the line of the family that eventually came to be known as the Omotesenke (lit., "front Sen house/family"). Similarly, Sen Sōshitsu is the hereditary name of the iemoto in the Urasenke line of the three Sen families/houses, and Sen Sōshu is that of the iemoto in the Mushakōjisenke line. ==References== *Daijirin, 2nd Ed. *Daijisen, 1st. Ed. *Kōjien, 5th Ed. 〔 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「Sen Sōsa」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|