Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 7.djvu/193

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

VARIOUS APPLICATIONS OF ART

  • Deme Yukan Mitsuyasu—seventeenth century (d. 1652). Son of Jikan. Called also Sukezaemon.
  • Deme Tohaku Mitsutaka—seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (d. 1715).
  • Deme Tosui Mitsunori—seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (d. 1729). Called also Mokunosuke, Manku, and Mambi.
  • Deme Hokan Mitsunao—eighteenth century (d. 1743). Called Hanzo.
  • Deme Yusai Yasuhisa—eighteenth century (d. 1766).
  • Deme Choun Yasuyoshi—eighteenth century (d. 1774). Called also Makunosuke.
  • Deme Toun Yasutaka—nineteenth century. Called also Untaro.
  • Deme Hanzo Yasukore—nineteenth century.

THE THREE "ECHIZEN DEME"

  • Deme Jirozaemon Mitsuteru—sixteenth century.
  • Deme Jirozaemon Norimitsu—seventeenth century.
  • Deme Jirozaemon Yoshimitsu—seventeenth century. Called also Genjiro.
  • Deme Gensuke Hidemitsu—seventeenth century. Called also Joshin, or Jokei.
  • Deme Genkiu Mitsunaga—seventeenth century (d. 1672). Son of Jokei. Called also Ko-Genkiu (the old Genkiu) and Manyei.
  • Deme Genkiu Mitsushige—seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (d. 1719).
  • Deme Genkiu Mitsufusa—eighteenth century (d. 1758).
  • Deme Genkiu Mitsuzane—eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (d. in 1812).
  • Deme Naka Mitsuyuki—nineteenth century. Called also Taroyemon.
  • Deme Gensuke Mitsuakira—nineteenth century.
  • Deme Genri Yoshimitsu—seventeenth century (d. 1625).
  • Deme Genri Toshimitsu—seventeenth century.

167