Category
page 1Buddhists of the Kamakura period
Go-Fukakusa-in no Nijō
Japanese poet and author
Fujiwara no Hidehira
Third ruler of Northern Fujiwara
Shunzei's Daughter
poet
Tankei
thumb|Statue of Avalokitesvara|Sahasrabhuja-arya-avalokiteśvara in [[Sanjusangen-dō (National Treasure of Japan)]]
Tankei (湛慶 1173 – June 13, 1256) was a Japanese sculptor of the Kei school, which flourished in the Kamakura period. He was the student of and eldest son of the master sculptor Unkei. He was also the teacher, and uncle of the sculptor Kōen, who would collaborate with his works, and would succeed him as head of the Kei School upon his death in 1256.
Hatakeyama Shigetada
Japanese samurai
Mongaku
thumb|Portrait of Mongaku (Tokyo National Museum)
Mongaku (文覚) was a Japanese samurai and Shingon Buddhist priest of the late Heian and early Kamakura period. He was a close associate of shogun Minamoto no Yoritomo, having contributed to the declaration of the Genpei War. Myōe was the disciple of his disciple Jōkaku. His secular name, before ordination, was Endō Moritō. He is also known as Mongaku Shōnin.
Minamoto no Michichika
Japanese noble