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Topic: Schools of Japanese tea ceremony


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In the News (Sat 11 Oct 08)

  
 The Japanese Tea Ceremony
Tea schools in Japan, which are still in existence today, teach the etiquette and art of tea making.
Based on the four principles; purity, harmony, respect and tranquillity, the tea ceremony, known as chanoyu, is used to teach discipline and instill respect for others.
Starting after a traditional Japanese meal, the ceremony can last from three to five hours.
www.stashtea.com /ceremony.htm   (218 words)

  
 Shogun's Sweet Dreams - Japanese D/s
A Japanese woman is expected to study and learn, indeed is sent to various schools to learn The Tea Ceremony, traditional dance, flower arranging, cooking and other cultural arts.
Japanese companies only send their executives over here for a maximum of two or three years to prevent them from becoming "contaminated".
Japanese men are dominant in most areas of life.
shogun_lord.tripod.com /japanese-ds.html   (1567 words)

  
 Japanese Philosophy and Religion (Jones)
This investigation will involve some Japanese ideals of beauty--aware (sensitivity), yugen (mystery and depth), sabi (loneliness), etc.--as they are embodied in various forms of Japanese art (poetry, literature, ceramics, painting, tea ceremony, drama, film, etc.) and their relation to cultural expressions of kata (form) and a m a e (dependency).
Class 2 Schools of Japanese Buddhism: Pure Land,
This course is an upper level Introductory course to the themes and problems of Japanese philosophy and reiigion beginning in ancient times and moving historically to modern times.
library.kcc.hawaii.edu /external/asdp/phil/easian/japan/jones.html   (1567 words)

  
 Japanese Festivals and Japanese Culture
The devotion and appreciation of traditional art flourishes throughout Japan from schools of tea ceremony (chanoyu) and flower arrangement (ikebana) to bonsai, sumo and performing theater arts.
Take a glimpse of Japanese culture and art.
The Japanese are well known for their hand crafted ceramic dishes to stunning lacquer bowls, plates, bento box and trays.
www.explorejapan.com /jculture.htm   (227 words)

  
 Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
The festival is sponsored by the Japanese Teachers Association of Charlotte and Gastonia.
The festival will include cultural demonstrations (Aikido, flower arrangement, & tea ceremony), an Asian Food Court, Asian craft, Japanese traditional plays, Origami folding, Shuuji (Japanese calligraphy), a raffle, Garakuta-ichi (flea market), student performances and more!
Smith Academy of International Languages (1600 Tyvola Rd.) will host a Kodomo Matsuri (Children's Japanese Cultural Festival) on Saturday, May 31, from 1 p.m.
www.cms.k12.nc.us /news/stories/1069.asp   (89 words)

  
 Tea_Ceremony ONLINE SHOP - www.eheee.com Shopping, Search, Mobile, News - Tea_Ceremony ONLINE SHOP
Discover Japanese Tea Ceremony (Chado) The Chado (Sado), or Japanese Tea Ceremony is a study or discipine of preparing, serving and drinking green tea.
Omotesenke Foundation of Florida Intro to chanoyu covering history and philosophy, objects used in the ceremony, and a glossary of tea ceremony terminology.
There are many schools of tea art ("ryuuha") current in Japan: for example, Omotesenke, Urasenke, and Mushanokoujisenke.
www.eheee.com /dir_174402_0_0___.html   (89 words)

  
 A Glimpse at Chanoyu
My first experience into this peaceful world of tea was a visit to the Urasenke Foundation Center in Los Angeles where I observed a class in chanoyu, one of several tea schools in the Japanese culture.
Years later, I observed another chanoyu, this time at the Urasenke Foundation Center in San Francisco where I, and a group of tea vendors, sat on tatami mats and observed two teamasters demonstrate the intricate step-by-step ceremony.
Urasenke Foundation Centers offer classes in chanoyu, tea gatherings that honor the seasons, and other tea-related events.
www.sallys-place.com /beverages/tea/chanoyu.htm   (89 words)

  
 Hinamastsuri 2003
Omotesenke, is one of three Japanese tea ceremony schools that originated in Kyoto in
.  Omotesenke school in Vancouver was started more than twenty years ago by the tea master Kochi Soshin.  Since then, we have had many opportunities to participate in various events such as “ Asian Week” held at UBC.  We also hold an annual “Spring Tea Ceremony” which everyone is welcome to attend.
WABI is described as being honest and modest.  SABI points towards a medieval, authentic era combining elements of old age, loneliness, resignation and tranquility.  For more than 400 years, Rikyu’s style has been passed down to present time, existing in his original form.
www.gss.ubc.ca /events/hinamastsuri/Arts.html   (89 words)

  
 Online Japanese dictionary
explanation: One of the 3 main tea ceremony schools together with Omotesenke and Mushanokoji senke.
related topics: Tea ceremony, Sen no Rikyu, Omotesenke
Urasenke means "backside Senke" because his house was located behind Omotesenke which means "outside Senke".
www.docoja.com /cgi-bin/mainwordj?histg+Urasenke+dico/hisgifg   (89 words)

  
 Intranet Home - Shoreline Community College
Shoreline Community College and the Clay Club are grateful that he has agreed to demonstrate Japanese pottery making techniques and answer questions about Japanese Ceramics and the Tea Ceremony.
Shoreline Clay Club invites you to attend a free workshop with Japanese potter Koji Toyoda at the College Ceramic Studio on November 19th from noon to 4:30 pm in the Ceramics Studio in room 2065.
This week Jeff is has scheduled student visits at Meadowdale, Ingraham, Bishop Blanchet, Bothell High schools and drop-bys at Inglemoor, Mountlake Terrace, Kings and Nathan Hale.
intranet.shoreline.edu /intranethome   (1802 words)

  
 Tea Focus - Japanese Tea Ceremony
Scenes of traditional Japanese clothing, schools, and a merchant family.
An introduction to the traditional drums, stringed instruments, and flutes of Japan.
Provides description and history of geisha, their clothes, and working districts.
www.teafocus.com /japaneseteaceremony   (615 words)

  
 The Japanese Tea Ceremony
A number of daimyo-style and other tea schools that developed in the Edo period continue today, but the largest tea schools are descended from two grandsons of Sen no Rikyu, the Urasenke School and the Omotesenke School.
After Rikyu's death by ritual suicide, tea masters serving provincial lords (daimyo) also developed more decorative tea utensils to suit the tastes and needs of their particular milieu.
www.gotheborg.com /qa/teaceremony.shtml   (615 words)

  
 Japanese Culture - Arts - Sado, Tea Ceremony
The roots of today's major schools can be traced to tea master Sen No Rikyu (1522-1591).
The sons of Rikyu's grandson Sotan founded their own schools: Ura Senke for commoners, Omote Senke for aristocrats and Mushanokoji Senke, which highly values the principle of wabi.
Shuko, a pupil of Ikkyu, became tea master to the Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa at whose villa (now known as Ginkakuji or the 'Temple of the Siver Pavillion' in Kyoto) the first purpose made tea room in Japan was built.
www.japan-zone.com /culture/sado.shtml   (916 words)

  
 Japanese Culture - Arts - Sado, Tea Ceremony
The roots of today's major schools can be traced to tea master Sen No Rikyu (1522-1591).
The sons of Rikyu's grandson Sotan founded their own schools: Ura Senke for commoners, Omote Senke for aristocrats and Mushanokoji Senke, which highly values the principle of wabi.
Shuko, a pupil of Ikkyu, became tea master to the Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa at whose villa (now known as Ginkakuji or the 'Temple of the Siver Pavillion' in Kyoto) the first purpose made tea room in Japan was built.
www.japan-zone.com /culture/sado.shtml   (916 words)

  
 Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urasenke Konnichian Website (the official homepage of the Urasenke school) (Japanese and English)
Within each school there are sub-schools, and in each school there are seasonal and temporal variations in the method of preparing and enjoying the tea, and in the types and forms of utensils and tea used.
A tea ceremony can last between one hour and four to five hours, depending on the type of ceremony performed, and the types of meal and tea served.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Japanese_tea_ceremony   (916 words)

  
 The Japanese Tea Ceremony in Philadelphia
Urasenke is one of about 10 different tea schools active in Japan today.
Urasenke La Salle was founded by the late Brother Joseph Keenan (1932-1999), a member of the Christian Brothers Catholic teaching order and a professor at La Salle University.
When Brother Keenan died in 1999, the Urasenke La Salle teachers -- Taeko Shervin and Mariko LaFleur -- kept the tea house open with the help of the students and the generous support of La Salle University.
home.earthlink.net /~mleebeard/uls.html   (916 words)

  
 News from the 1997-98 Collaboratives
In addition, the participants took a field trip to the Japanese gardens in Portland, arriving just as the mist was lifting, and later in the day participating in a traditional tea ceremony.
*In Honolulu, Hawaii, Prince David Kawananakoa Intermediate School has worked closely with its collaborative partner, the Consortium for Teaching Asia and the Pacific in the Schools (CTAPS), including participation in a three-day workshop focusing on the approach of teachers to viewing Asia and including a tour of Chinatown.
Merie Dol and Harriet McFarlane's afternoon presentation of a CTAPS mapping lesson, "The School through Geographic Eyes," was intended to help teachers prepare to use the activity as a framework for understanding the diverse multicultural setting of the school.
www.askasia.org /for_educators/professional_development_grants/teach_asia_initiative/newsletter/news.htm   (1098 words)

  
 Plutschow - Japanese Tea Ceremony
Some schools of poetry, however, taught poetry to family outsiders while at the same time maintaining a degree of control and leadership over teacher-disciple relationship and poetic diction that was beneficial to the state.
There were iemoto before but, as in the case of traditional families of imperial cooking or kickball, they did not appeal to a larger public and accepted no disciples other than from among family members.
In 3/10, therefore, the emperor Ogimachi bestowed on Hideyoshi the imperial title of Minister of the Interior (Naidaijin) and, after Konoe Sakihisa (1536-1612) made him his adopted son, the court bestowed on him the highest title under the emperor, Kanpaku (Chief Minister of State).
www.anthropoetics.ucla.edu /ap0501/tea.htm   (1098 words)

  
 Japanese Culture - Arts - Sado, Tea Ceremony
The roots of today's major schools can be traced to tea master Sen No Rikyu (1522-1591).
Shuko, a pupil of Ikkyu, became tea master to the Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa at whose villa (now known as Ginkakuji or the 'Temple of the Siver Pavillion' in Kyoto) the first purpose made tea room in Japan was built.
www.japan-zone.com /culture/sado.shtml   (1098 words)

  
 Mansfield Freeman Center
The FEAS also runs a unique outreach program, which enables students from local schools to learn about East Asian culture through hands-on activity workshops, exploring such subjects as music, writing, and calligraphy, food and cooking, martial arts, and the Japanese tea ceremony.
The Mansfield Freeman Center for East Asian Studies (FEAS) is the home of Wesleyan's East Asian Studies major.
The Mansfield Freeman Center for East Asian Studies is situated on the Wesleyan campus in a late Victorian shingle-style home (built in 1905; renovated in 1987).
www.wesleyan.edu /east/mansfieldf/mansfield.html   (190 words)

  
 Culture Message: September 2005
Many Japanese who are interested in their own culture, take tea ceremony lessons with a teacher.
AD White Prof Discusses Islam in Schools (Society and culture)
He revealed himself as an outright moderniser convinced "the whole culture and identity of the party had to change".
culturemessage.blogspot.com /2005_09_01_culturemessage_archive.html   (2774 words)

  
 Omotesenke - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Omotesenke (表千家, literally "front of the Sen house") is the name of one of the main schools of Japanese tea ceremony.
This page was last modified 22:15, 8 May 2005.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Omotesenke   (2774 words)

  
 Japanese Tea Ceremony (Chado) for Peace and Inner Tranquility by UniOasis
Many new Japanese Chado schools that followed carried on the philosophies of wabi-cha.
Urasenke and Omotesenke, founded by two of Rikyu's great-grandsons, are two of the largest chado shools.
Today, chado is taught and practiced throughout the world.
www.unioasis.com /docs/dis/teaceremony/dis_teaceremony.html   (2774 words)

  
 Kakiseni.com - Cultural Discovery Series - Japanese Tea Ceremony
The largest of all the tea schools in Japan today are the Urasenke and Omotesenke, founded respectively by two of Rikkyu's great-grandsons: Soshitu San and Sosa San.
The Urasenke Tea Ceremony will be demonstrated on Apr 20 while the Omotesenke Tea Ceremony will be demonstrated on Apr 26.
The tea ceremony is usually performed with up to five guests.
www.kakiseni.com /events/talks/MzQxMg.html   (2774 words)

  
 Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A tea ceremony can last between one hour and four to five hours, depending on the type of ceremony performed, and the types of meal and tea served.
When tea is made with water drawn from the depths of mind Whose bottom is beyond measure, We really have what is called cha-no-yu.
Two main schools, the Omotesenke (表千家) and Urasenke (裏千家), have evolved, each with its own prescribed rituals.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Japanese_tea_ceremony   (2774 words)

  
 Japanese Culture - Arts - Sado, Tea Ceremony
There are several schools of Sado, or tea ceremony.
That sentence alone should warn off anyone who thinks this art form is in any way related to plopping an Earl Grey teabag into a cup of boiling water.
Japan travel guide, information on Japan and Japanese culture.
www.japan-zone.com /culture/sado.shtml   (890 words)

  
 Japanese Tea Ceremony
The great master of the Japan tea ceremony was Sen no Rikyu who lived from 1522 to 1591.
Since then the art of sado was handed down from generation to generation and is cherished in different schools, which exist up to our times.
It promoted the development of Japanese porcelain manufacturing.
www.artelino.com /articles/japanese_tea_ceremony.asp   (308 words)

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