INDEX
- Inui Katsu-no-suke, potter, 218.
- Inuyama ware, 295.
- Ippo, Agano, potter, 323.
- Irie family, potters, 218.
- Ise province. See Banko ware.
- Iseya. See Yōsobei of Kyōtō.
- Ishida Heikichi, potter, 247.
- Ishida Heizō, potter, 254.
- Ishikawa Prefecture. See Kaga.
- Itakura family, potters, 346.
- Ito Koemon. See Tōzan.
- Ito Tozan, potter, his faience with decorations under the glaze, 423.
- Itsgen. See Sahei.
- Itsniu. See Sahei.
- Ivory white porcelain, Chinese and Korean, 43; Seifū's, 418.
- Iwaki province, Sōma ware, 395–397.
- Iwakura, Kyōtō, potteries, one of Ninsei's workshops, 182; obscurity, 205; closed, 206.
- Iwamatsu family, potters, 114.
- Iwami province, porcelain, 340; imitation Raku faience, 341.
- Iwao, Korean potter in Hizen, 56.
- Iwasaki family, potters, 115.
- Iwashiro province, Aizu faience and porcelain, 394.
- Iwayo family, potters, 114.
- Iyo province, porcelain, 343.
- Izumi province, Minato ware, 354.
- Izumo province, early keramic industry, 6; modern faience, 335, 337, 340; Rakuzan ware, 336; origin of Fujina ware, 336; its varieties, 337–339; potters, 338, 339; porcelain, 340; probable point of Mongoloid immigration, 427.
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- Jacquemart, Albert, errors on Japanese porcelain, 18, 91; error on Korean porcelain, 53.
- Jimbei, Tanaka, potter, 36.
- Jingō, empress, invasion of Korea, 7.
- Jin-no-suke, Hayashi, potter, 115.
- Jirobei, Soejima, potter, 116.
- Jirokichi, Agano, potter, 324.
- Jisaku, Soejima, potter, 116.
- Jiujiro, Higuchi, potter, 108.
- Joen, Imamura, potter, 100, 107; discovers a special clay at Mikawachi, 100.
- Joen Daimyōjin, name under which Imamura Yajibei was worshipped, 101.
- Juemon, Fukuda, potter, 109.
- Juji Kihachiro, potter, 403.
- Juji Kizo, Korean potter in Buzen, 402; descendants, 402, 403.
- Jūkan, Chin, potter, 159, 422.
- Junsaburo, Imamura, potter, 107.
- Jutarō, Mashimizu, potter, 225.
- Juzaemon, Kawara, potter, 144, 155, 158.
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- Kada Hanroku, potter, 336.
- Kaempfer, Engelbrecht, on Japanese trade, 40; on Kyōtō manufactures, 173.
- Kaga province, early ware, 236; Kutani ware, 236–241, 248–252; composition of the ware, 241–244; Nomi district potteries, 246–249; kilns, 248; post-feudal conditions, 252; character of modern ware, 253; marks, 254; Ohi faience, 255–258; so-called Ohi faience, 258; ware especially called Kaga, 259.
- Kagetō. See Kichizaemon of Owari.
- Kagiya family, potters, 188, 195.
- Kagoshima Prefecture. See Satsuma.
- Kairaku-en ware, 375; imitation, 377.
- Kajiwara family, potters, 115.
- Kajū Mimpei, potter, 350–352; successors, 352.
- Kakiemon. See Sakaida.
- Kakuji, Mori, potter, 333.
- Kakusaburo, Funaki, potter, 338.
- Kambei, Ohi, potters of three generations, 256.
- Kamei Sahei, potter, 119.
438