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Up for sale is this "Tachibana Daiki Chashaku | Japanese bamboo tea scoop #5098" If you have any questions please contact us before buy it. No reserve.
- length: approx. 18.1cm (7 1⁄8in)
- weight: 4g (gross 159g)
- writing on the case: Setsugetsuka ("snow, the moon, and flower" is a collective word to refer to beautiful objects of nature. ) Tachibaba Daiki
Tachibana Daiki
1899-2005
male
zen monk
Born on December 22, 1899, in Osaka Prefecture, he was raised in a family that managed the affairs of a local temple in Sakai City. He graduated from Sakai City Industrial Supplementary School. In 1921, he was ordained at Nansouji Temple in his hometown, Sakai, beginning his journey as a Zen monk. He served as the chief priest of Tokuzenji, a sub-temple of Daitokuji, and eventually became the head of the Daitokuji sect in 1953 and the abbot of Daitokuji, its 511th, in May 1968. He also held the position of highest advisor at Daitokuji and was involved in the restoration of Nyoian within Daitokuji in 1973 and the rebuilding of Matsugenin in Nara in 1980. From April 1982 to 1986, he served as the president of Hanazono University.
Chashaku, tea scoop, was originally a scoopula, dispensing scoop, which had been used in China. Many of them were metal made ones and had a taro's leaf like form scoop with a handle whose top was a ball like form to crush Chinese herb with it. Meanwhile, in Japan, people used chashaku as a tool to put powdered green tea into tea bowl.
At the end of Muromachi period, however, the tea ceremony was founded, and the ceremony's style in which host sit in company with the guest(s) in the same room and made tea in front of the guest(s) began. The host spooned up powdered green tea out of bottle, which was made of wood and kept the powder. Then chashaku made of metal did not suit for the use because it may damage the bottle and spooning up powders out of the bottle was difficult because of the chashaku's wide scoop. Therefore, Shutoku, a disciple of Juko Murata(1422-1502) developed his original wooden lacquered chashaku, whose shape was suitable for satisfying the condition. It was called "Shutoku-gata".
After that, bamboo made chashaku was developed. It was used as a disposal, single use tool.
Since the era of Rikyu, however, people began to put it back into a hollow bamboo utensil. In addition, people began to decorate the bamboo utensil with a stylized signature. At this point, people got to love a combination beauty of a chashaku and a hollow bamboo utensil. As time goes by, many tea experts have made hand-made bamboo chashakus and various chashakus has been made to love the shape of them as well as today.