Gukanshō
| Golle imaaɗe | 1220 |
|---|---|
| Title | 愚管抄 |
| Genre | history book |
| Author | Jien |
| Publication date | 1220 |
| Country of origin | Kamakura shogunate |
| Language of work or name | Late Middle Japanese |
| Copyright status | public domain |
Gukanshō (愚管抄; lit. "Jottings a Fool") ko deftere daartol e binndol ko faati e daartol Japon. Njuuteeki mum ko defte jeeɗiɗi, ko almuudo Buddhist biyeteeɗo Jien mo diine Tendai winndi ɗum hedde hitaande 1220.
Jien, binnduɗo Gukanshō (hono no siforaa e natal tawaangal e Isshu Hyakunin Ogura) Caɗeele politik ummoriiɗe e jokkondiral hakkunde laamu Imperial e bakufu, addani Jien winndude. Jien ko ɓiy Fujiwara no Tadamichi, e miijo makko ndernderiijo ina hollita wonde golle makko ina njogii miijo ceertungo. Nattii golloraade ngam waasde jogaade njurum, o jaɓɓii ɗum ; e Gukanshō ina siforee no feewi ko golle hujjaaji daartol. Winndiyanke oo ina etoo ɓadtaade ko ɓenni e Japon e mbaadi kesiri, kono o waɗi ɗum ko e les njiimaandi nafooje ɓooyɗe daartol e iwdi.
Ko woni e mum Binndol ngol ina waɗi pecce tati mawɗe :
Toɓɓe 1 e 2 ina mbaɗi daartol laamɗo puɗɗortoongol laamɗo Jimmu haa joofni e laamɗo Juntoku. Toɓɓe 3 haa 6 ina kollita sifaa daartol jowitiingol e waylooji politik. Toɓɓere 7 ndee ina rokka ciimtol ngonka politik Japon hannde. Binndol hakkilantaaku ngol etinooma huutoraade doosɗe Buddhist ko wayi no mappō e nder golle ƴellitgol daartol yimɓe e kewuuji. O woniino kadi e hakkille makko, o woni ko e huutoraade doosɗe Budisma e nder ƴeewndo daartol Japon. Kono Jien meeɗaa seerde e darnde mum no ɓiɗɗo e miñi mum Fujiwara kogyū[laɓɓitingol ina haani] ardiiɓe e darnde mum no almuudo jannguɗo e golloowo diine Buddha.
Ƴeew kadi
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]Duɗal daartol to duɗal jaaɓi haaɗtirde Tokiyoo
Nokku wiɗto hakkunde leyɗeele ngam janngude ɗemngal Japon Eɓɓoore binndol daartol Japon Taariindi leydi Japon .
Teskorɗe
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki][1].[2].The writer does try to approach Japan's past in a new way, but he does so under the influences of old historical and genealogical interests.[3].[4] However, Jien could never completely divorce his position as a son and brother of Fujiwara kogyūTemplate:What officials from his position as a priest who studied and practiced Buddhism.[5]