グーグルレンズ3
Kibi-no Makibi (695-775) is one of the most famous scholars of Japan's Nara period. Among the students of the Japanese envoys (公使)to Tang Dynasty China,(唐) it is said that Abe-no Nakamaro and Kibi-no Makibi were the only ones who made reputations(好評、名声) for themselves. Makibi brought a plethora (過多)of examples of Chinese civilization back to Japan associated with Confucianism(儒教), astronomy(天文学), mathematics, warfare(戦争), and architecture, to name a few. He worked his way up to Udaijin Minister and played important roles in the Imperial Court. He died at the age of eighty one. In November, 753, he finished his second visit as vice-envoy (副公使)and left China. Due to a gale(強風), the First ship, with Ambassador Fujiwara-no Kiyokawa and Abe-no Nakamaro onboard, washed ashore(岸に打ち上げられる) in Vietnam, and they could never return home. The Second ship, with Ganjin (Jianzhen), the Chinese monk(僧) who introduced the precepts(教え) of Buddhism to Japan, onboard, and the Third ship, with Kibi-no Makibi onboard, arrived on Yaku-shima Island one after another. The two ships left the island and soon the Second ship reached Akimeya-ura (Minami Satsuma City). The Third ship drifted ashore on "Muro-zaki Point of Kii," which is considered to be Tomyo-zaki Point of Taiji, according to Kii Sho ku Fudoki. This stone monument was erected(建てる) by the Taiji Board of Education in 1971.にほんブログ村