- Santō
Kyōden (山東 京伝, 13
September 1761 Edo – 27
October 1816) was a ****anese artist, writer, and the
owner of a
tobacco shop
during the Edo period. His...
-
success of the play led to a
separate re-run of
Kyoden:
Moyuru Honnoji,
revived under the name
Kyoden:
Moyuru Honnoji:
Saien (舞台『刀剣乱舞』虚伝 燃ゆる本能寺〜再演〜),...
-
Kyōden Station (経田駅,
Kyōden-eki) is a
railway station in the city of Uozu, Toyama, ****an,
operated by the
private railway operator Toyama Chihō Railway...
-
usage in the late 18th
century with the
publication of such
works as Santō
Kyōden's picturebook Shiji no
yukikai (1798), and in the
early 19th
century with...
- made the
subject of
burlesque gesaku novels (cf. §Saikaku, 1687 and Santō
Kyōden's §Hakoiri musume, 1791).
There were also
preserved ningyo being manufactured...
-
Momotaro swinging the
magic mallet (uchide no kozuchi), with his
animal companions. ―Santō-an
Kyōden (Santō
Kyōden). Ehon
takara no
nanakusa (1804)...
-
ichiya sen-ryō) by
Kyōden (1786),
satirizing Neo-Confucian
policies Tale of the Two
Tambours (Jidai sewa nichō tsuzumi) by
Kyōden (1788),
satirizing political...
- A man
smoking a kiseru.
Illustration of the
cover of the
novel Komon gawa ("Elegant
chats on
fabric design") by Santō
Kyōden, 1790....
-
Touken Ranbu Stage play "Touken
Ranbu -
Kyoden:
Moyuru Honnoji - Shoen" (2016)
Stage play "Touken
Ranbu -
Kyoden:
Moyuru Honnoji - Saien" (2016)
Stage play...
- fantasy/historical
romance Nansō
Satomi Hakkenden, in
addition to
other yomihon. Santō
Kyōden wrote yomihon mostly set in the
pleasure quarters until the
Kansei Edicts...