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The Tenrei banshō meigi or
Tenrei banshō myōgi (篆隷萬象名義
?, "The myriad things [of the universe],
pronounced, defined, in seal script and clerical script") is the oldest
extant Japanese dictionary of Chinese characters. The title is also
written 篆隷万象名義 with the modern graphic variant ban (万
"10,000; myriad") for ban (萬 "10,000; myriad").
The prominent Heian Period monk and scholar Kūkai, founder of the Shingon
Buddhism, edited his Tenrei banshō meigi around 830-835
CE, and based it upon the (circa 543 CE) Chinese Yupian dictionary. Among the
Tang Dynasty
Chinese books that Kūkai brought back to Japan in 806 CE was an
original edition Yupian and a copy of the (121 CE) Shuowen Jiezi.
One of the National
treasures of Japan held at the Kōzan-ji temple is an 1114 copy of the
Tenrei banshō meigi.
The Chinese Yupian dictionary defines 12,158 characters
under a system of 542 radicals (bùshǒu
部首), which slightly modified the original 540
in the Shuowen jiezi. The Japanese Tenrei banshō
meigi defines approximately 1,000 kanji (Chinese characters), under 534
radicals (bu 部), with a total of over 16,000 characters. Each
entry gives the Chinese character in ancient seal script, Chinese
pronunciation in fanqie, and
definition, all copied from the Yupian. The American
Japanologist Don Bailey writes:
At the time of its compilation, calligraphic style and the
Chinese readings and meanings of the characters were probably about
all that was demanded of a dictionary, so that the Tenrei
banshō meigi suited the scholarly needs of the times. It was
compiled in Japan by a Japanese but is in no sense a Japanese
dictionary, for it contains not one Wakun (Japanese
reading). (1960:3)
In modern terms, this dictionary gives borrowed on'yomi
"Sino-Japanese readings" but not native kun'yomi "Japanese
readings". A later Heian dictionary, the (898-901 CE) Shinsen
Jikyō was the first to include Japanese readings.
Ikeda Shoju has studied the conversion of JIS encoding to Unicode in order to create an
online Tenrei banshō meigi.
References
- Bailey, Don Clifford. (1960). "Early Japanese Lexicography".
Monumenta Nipponica 16:1-52.
- Mori Shiten 林史典. (1996). "篆隷万象名義 (Tenrei banshō
meigi)." In Nihon jisho jiten 日本辞書辞典 (The
Encyclopedia of Dictionaries Published in Japan), Okimori
Takuya 沖森卓也, et al., eds., pp. 196–197. Tokyo: Ōfū. ISBN
4-273-02890-5
External
links