11Story
The Siebold Collection 1889 |
Heinrich von Siebold (1852−1908) was the second son of the renowned German doctor Phillip Franz von Siebold, who spent many years during the Edo period in Dutch service in Nagasaki and is considered one of the co-founders of Japanese studies. Born in Boppard am Rhein, Heinrich von Siebold spent his youth in Bonn and Würzburg. Following his father’s example he went to Japan, without completing secondary school or university study, a year after the Meiji Restoration in 1869. There he worked for thirty years as a translator and diplomat, in the service of the Austro-Hungarian embassy in Tōkyō.
|
A wood box containing various kinds of ingredients for food. Siebold Collection 1889 |
|
Among the highlights of the Siebold Collection are a number of Buddhist sculptures; following the Meiji government’s decision to construct a new State Shinto and to close many Buddhist temples, these were readily available. This statue of a Buddhist monk is, unusual as it depicts an individual. The ink inscription on the inside of the statue informs us that it depicts the founding abbot, Chizonin Nikkei (1535-1620), of the Honmyoji temple in Edo (modern-day Tokyo). Perhaps dating from as early as the turn of the seventeenth century, the statue was presented to the temple in 1620 on the anniversary of the death of Chizonin Nikkei by a member of a highly respected samurai family. In 1672, to commemorate the fifty-third anniversary of the monk’s death, the polychrome decoration was renewed and the statue displayed in a new shrine. |
|
Statue of a Nichiren Buddhist Monk
|
<< PREVIOUS SECTION << |