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Southern Record (åę¹é², NanpÅroku) is a purported book of secrets describing the teachings of the tea saint, Sen no RikyÅ«.
After the death of Rikyu, the book was lost with its author, Nanbo Sokei, a Zen priest and Rikyu's leading disciple. About one hundred years later, in 1686, Tachibana Jitsuzan, the chief vassal of the Kuroda clan purportedly happened to find the book while heading to Edo with his lord. Tachibana set about the task of transcribing the work into five volumes, adding two further volumes when more documents came to light. He then made a fair copy of the seven volumes, and the book was named Southern Record for the first time. The collection was highly regarded as a direct record of Rikyu's teachings and exerted a great influence on the process of the concept building of wabi-cha. However, modern researchers believe that the book contains information not from Sen no Rikyū and regard it as a forgery.
Chapters
First Scroll: Memorandum å·»äø č¦ęøć
Second Scroll: Gatherings å·»äŗ ä¼
Third Scroll: Shelves å·»äø ę£
Fourth Scroll: Schools å·»å ęøé¢
Fifth Scroll: Tables å·»äŗ å°å
Sixth Scroll: Citations å·»å å¢Øå¼
Seventh Scroll: Memoirs å·»äø ę» å¾
Outline
There are two opinions regarding the origin of the book's name. The first holds that it derived from the opening passage of the work by the Chinese writer, Lu Yu, entitled ChĆ” Ching (Cha-kyo in Japanese, The Classic of Tea or Tea Classic in English), in which he writes "Tea is a good tree in the south". The alternative view asserts that it came from the name of the original author, Nanbo Sokei.
References
External links
(in Japanese) Enkaku-ji Hakata