The Online Books Page

Arai Hakuseki

(Arai, Hakuseki, 1657-1725)

The Japanese scholar Arai Hakuseki (1657-1725)
Image from Wikimedia Commons

Arai Hakuseki (新井 白石; March 24, 1657 – June 29, 1725) was a Confucianist, scholar-bureaucrat, academic, administrator, writer and politician in Japan during the middle of the Edo period, who advised the shōgun Tokugawa Ienobu. His personal name was Kinmi or Kimiyoshi (君美). Hakuseki (白石) was his pen name. His father was a Kururi han samurai Arai Masazumi (新井 正済). (From Wikipedia)

More about Arai Hakuseki: Associated author:
 

Books about Arai Hakuseki -- Books by Arai Hakuseki

Books about Arai Hakuseki:

9 additional books about Arai Hakuseki in the extended shelves:

Books by Arai Hakuseki:

  • [Info] Arai, Hakuseki, 1657-1725: Fookoua Siriak: ou, Traité sur l'Origine des Richesses au Japon, Écrit en 1708 (extract from Nouveau Journal Asiatique, in French; Paris: Schubart et Heideloff, 1828), trans. by Julius von Klaproth
Additional books by Arai Hakuseki in the extended shelves:

Find more by Arai Hakuseki at your library, or elsewhere.

Help with reading books -- Report a bad link -- Suggest a new listing

Home -- Search -- New Listings -- Authors -- Titles -- Subjects -- Serials

Books -- News -- Features -- Archives -- The Inside Story

Edited by John Mark Ockerbloom (onlinebooks@pobox.upenn.edu)
OBP copyrights and licenses.