词条 | Basil Hall Chamberlain |
释义 |
|name = Basil Hall Chamberlain |image = Basil Hall Chamberlain.jpg |caption = Basil Hall Chamberlain |birth_date = {{Birth date|1850|10|18}} |birth_place = Southsea, England |death_date = {{Death date and age|1935|02|15|1850|10|18}} |death_place = Geneva, Switzerland |nationality = English |other_names = |known_for = |occupation = Author, Japanologist }} Basil Hall Chamberlain (18 October 1850 – 15 February 1935) was a professor of Japanese at Tokyo Imperial University and one of the foremost British Japanologists active in Japan during the late 19th century. (Others included Ernest Satow and W. G. Aston.) He also wrote some of the earliest translations of haiku into English. He is perhaps best remembered for his informal and popular one-volume encyclopedia Things Japanese, which first appeared in 1890 and which he revised several times thereafter. His interests were diverse, and his works include an anthology of poetry in French. Early lifeChamberlain was born in Southsea (a part of Portsmouth) on the south coast of England, the son of an Admiral William Charles Chamberlain and his wife Eliza Hall, the daughter of the travel writer Basil Hall. His younger brother was Houston Stewart Chamberlain. He was brought up speaking French as well as English, even before moving to Versailles to live with his maternal grandmother in 1856 upon his mother's death. Once in France he acquired German as well. Chamberlain had hoped to study at Oxford, but instead started work at Barings Bank in London. He was unsuited to the work and soon had a nervous breakdown. It was in the hope of a full recovery that he sailed out of Britain, with no clear destination in mind. JapanChamberlain landed in Japan on 29 May 1873, employed by the Japanese government as an o-yatoi gaikokujin. He taught at the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy in Tokyo from 1874 to 1882. His most important position, however, was as professor of Japanese at Tokyo Imperial University beginning in 1886. It was here that he gained his reputation as a student of Japanese language and literature. (He was also a pioneering scholar of the Ainu and Ryukyuan languages.) His many works include the first translation of the Kojiki into English (1882), A Handbook of Colloquial Japanese (1888), Things Japanese (1890), and A Practical Guide to the Study of Japanese Writing (1905).[1] A keen traveller despite chronic weak health, he cowrote (with W. B. Mason) the 1891 edition of A Handbook for Travellers in Japan, of which revised editions followed. Chamberlain was a friend of the writer Lafcadio Hearn, once a colleague at the University, but the two became estranged over the years.[2] Percival Lowell dedicated his travelogue Noto: An Unexplored Corner of Japan (1891) to Chamberlain.[3] Chamberlain sent many Japanese artifacts to the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford. He left Japan in 1911 and moved to Geneva, where he lived until his death in 1935. Works by Chamberlain
See also
Notes{{notelist}}References1. ^{{cite magazine|title=CHAMBERLAIN, Basil Hall|magazine=Who's Who|year=1907|volume= 59|page=313|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yEcuAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA313}} 2. ^{{cite book |last1=Hearn |first1=Lafcadio |last2=Bisland |first2=Elizabeth |title=The Life and Letters of Lafcadio Hearn, including the Japanese Letters |volume=1 |publisher=Houghton, Mifflin and company |year=1906 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ds8EAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA57 |p=57–8 |quote=The second point was his attitude toward his friends — his quondam friends — all of whom he gradually dropped, with but few exceptions...}} (quoted from Chamberlain's letters). Chamberlain wrote to Hearn's biographer to explain that Hearn never lost his esteem, and he wrote a few times to Hearn, who had moved away to Matsue, Shimane, but the letters went unanswered. 3. ^ From the dedication. {{ cite book |last=Lowell |first=Percival |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FW4uAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP9&lpg=PP9 |title=Noto: An Unexplored Corner of Japan |year=1891 |publisher=The Riverside Press; printed by H. O. Houghton & Co. |location=Cambridge, MA |accessdate=November 8, 2011}} Further reading
External links{{wikisource author}}
11 : British expatriates in Japan|British Japanologists|Japanese–English translators|English orientalists|1850 births|1935 deaths|People from Southsea|Foreign educators in Japan|Foreign advisors to the government in Meiji-period Japan|University of Tokyo faculty|20th-century translators |
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