The Tale of Genji (manga)
Encyclopedia
is a Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...

ese manga
Manga
Manga is the Japanese word for "comics" and consists of comics and print cartoons . In the West, the term "manga" has been appropriated to refer specifically to comics created in Japan, or by Japanese authors, in the Japanese language and conforming to the style developed in Japan in the late 19th...

 version of Murasaki Shikibu
Murasaki Shikibu
Murasaki Shikibu was a Japanese novelist, poet and lady-in-waiting at the Imperial court during the Heian period. She is best known as the author of The Tale of Genji, written in Japanese between about 1000 and 1012...

's The Tale of Genji
The Tale of Genji
is a classic work of Japanese literature attributed to the Japanese noblewoman Murasaki Shikibu in the early 11th century, around the peak of the Heian period. It is sometimes called the world's first novel, the first modern novel, the first psychological novel or the first novel still to be...

by Waki Yamato
Waki Yamato
is a Japanese manga artist. She debuted in 1966 with the short story Dorobou Tenshi.Since this debut, Yamato steadily created and published a variety of works in the genre of shōjo manga...

.

It follows nearly the same plot with some modern adaptation. It was originally published from 1980 to 1993. It spanned thirteen volumes and was published by Kodansha
Kodansha
, the largest Japanese publisher, produces the manga magazines Nakayoshi, Afternoon, Evening, and Weekly Shonen Magazine, as well as more literary magazines such as Gunzō, Shūkan Gendai, and the Japanese dictionary Nihongo Daijiten. The company has its headquarters in Bunkyō, Tokyo...

. The series was partially translated into English
English language
English is a West Germanic language that arose in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of England and spread into what was to become south-east Scotland under the influence of the Anglian medieval kingdom of Northumbria...

 (as The Tale of Genji) by Stuart Atkin and Yoko Toyosaki as a part of Kodansha's attempts to publish bilingual manga as a study guide for Japanese students. The Tale of Genji sold 14 million copies with its 13 tankōbon
Tankobon
, with a literal meaning close to "independently appearing book", is the Japanese term for a book that is complete in itself and is not part of a series , though the manga industry uses it for volumes which may be in a series...

volumes by May 2006. The first ten volumes focus on Hikaru Genji
Hikaru Genji
is the protagonist of Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji. In the story, he is described as the most handsome man in the world and he attracts all women. Genji is the second son of Emperor Kiritsubo , but he is delegated to civilian life for political reasons and begins a career as an imperial...

 and his life, the final three volumes follow two princes, lord Kaoru
Kaoru Genji
Kaoru Genji is a fictional character in The Tale of Genji . He is the son of Hikaru Genji's wife, "Third Princess" , and Genji's nephew Kashiwagi. Genji is aware of the affair by his wife and nephew Kashiwagi...

 and Niou no miya (Royal Prince with Perfumes) after Hikaru Genji's death.

An anime adaptation was scheduled to air in Fuji Television
Fuji Television
is a Japanese television station based in Daiba, Minato, Tokyo, Japan, also known as or CX, based on the station's callsign "JOCX-DTV". It is the flagship station of the Fuji News Network and the ....

's noitaminA
Noitamina
– "Animation" written backwards – is a Fuji Television programming block, devoted to anime, originally broadcast each Thursday night from 24:45 to 25:15 . It was launched with the intention of expanding the target audience beyond the typical young male demographic...

 block, starting January 2009, but the producer decided to make the anime directly from the original Tale of Genji, calling the new anime Genji Monogatari Sennenki
Genji Monogatari Sennenki
is a Japanese anime adaptation of The Tale of Genji. Originally, it was meant to be an anime adaptation of Waki Yamato's The Tale of Genji manga, but the director decided to make it a direct adaptation of the original tale. The anime is directed by Osamu Dezaki. The series premiered on Fuji TV on...

.

The First Part

Volumes 1 to 10
  • Hikaru Genji - royal prince, 2nd son of Emperor Kiritsubo. Because of his beauty and excellence, people called him the Shining Prince. His father, the Emperor, loved this beautiful prince, and gave him a branch house, called Gen. This meant he was no longer part of the royal family and lost the right to succeed the throne, since his mother was a concubine of low rank. Therefore, he was called Gen-ji, shining Gen-ji (Hikaru Genji).
  • Emperor Kiritsubo - father of Genji. He wished Genji to become his successor, but it would be impossible since his mother Kiritsubo-koui's was of low rank and the mother of his 1st son, Kokiden-nyougo, was of high rank.
  • Kiritsubo-koui - 2nd class concubine of Emperor Kiritsubo, mother of Genji. The emperor loved her most, but it resulted in death of Kiritsubo-koui under jealousy and hatred of other concubines in the palace.
  • Kokiden-nyougo - 1st class concubine, mother of 1st royal prince (later, Emperor Suzaku) of Emperor Kiritsubo. Daughter of the Minister at the right.
  • Fujitsubo-nyougo - royal princess and 1st class concubine of Emperor Kiritsubo. Fujitsubo very looked like late Kiritsubo-koui. Emperor Kiritsubo loved her and she became the Empress consort (Chuuguu). Lord Genji loved and adored Fujitsubo. And he committed adultery with her.
  • Murasaki no ue - daughter of the Prince Lord Minister of Ceremony, niece of Empress consort Fujitsubo. Lord Genji first met her when she was 12 years old. Later, Genji married her and she was called Murasaki no ue (high Dame Murasaki).
  • Aoi no ue - daughter of the Minister at the left. She was 4 years older than Genji. Aoi was the first spouse of Genji - therefore she was called Aoi no ue (high Dame Aoi). She has been raised to be married to the next emperor, but was instead married to Genji who was the second son of the emperor. This has made Aoi cold and distant from her husband. Aoi was killed by jealous living ghost of royal Dame Rokujou.
  • Rokujou-miyasudokoro - mother of princess Umetsubo-nyougo, 1st class concubine of the former Crown Prince who was an elder brother of Emperor Kiritsubo. After her husband's death, she has locked herself up in her mansion and only comes out during a poetry recital. Considered to be very popular at court and carries the reputation of being both wise and beautiful. She became Genji's mistress. Her love overwhelmed the Prince Genji which eventually drove him away from her."Miyasudokoro" is title of mother of royal prince/princess.
  • Yuugiri - 2nd son of Genji. His mother was high Dame Aoi.
  • Emperor Suzaku - 1st son of Emperor Kiritsubo. His mother was Kokiden-nyougo. Suzaku succeeded his father Kiritsubo's throne and became emperor. Kokiden-nyougo was, then, grand Empress consort.
  • Emperor Reizei - son of Empress consort Fujitsubo. He was considered as the royal prince, son of Emperor Kiritsubo, but his real father was Lord Genji. He was a child of adultery.
  • Tou-no-chuujou - eldest son of the Minister at the left, elder brother of Aoi. He was a rival and good friend of Genji.
  • Yuugao - a young lady from middle class but reputed to be beautiful and young. She was one of Genji's loves. She was killed by living ghost of jealous Rokujou-miyasudokoro at the age of nineteen. Her death left Genji into a pit of depression. She left a girl baby, later called Tamakadura, who was just a daughter of Tou-no-chuujou.
  • Hana-chiru-sato - a young lady, sister of the concubine of Emperor Suzaku. One of Genji's loves. Not so beautiful, but warm-hearted lady.
  • Oborodukiyo - daughter of the Minister at the right, younger sister of grand Empress consort Kokiden. She was beautiful and brave lady. Kokiden planned to make her 1st class concubine of Emperor Suzaku. But she had love affairs with Lord Genji. Then, she became the chief Lady of Chamber (Naishi-no-kami) of Emperor Suzaku. Kokiden got anger, and Genji retired to the seashore place at Suma.
  • Akashi-no-okata - daughter of Priest Akashi. A beautiful, elegant, young lady. Genji and his followers met with disaster by typhoon at Suma. They moved to Akashi according to invitation by Priest Akashi. Genji, then, made love with her and begot a girl baby (later, Akashi-no-nyougo).
  • (shin)-Kokiden-nyougo - daughter of Tou-no-chuujou, elder sister of Kumoi-no-Kari. She was a 1st class concubine of Emperor Reizei.
  • Umetsubo-nyougo - daughter of Rokujou-miyasudokoro and the former Crown Prince. She was Royal princess and entered into the palace of Emperor Reizei as nyougo (1st class concubine). Royal Dame Rokujou had died. Genji became her father in palace low. Emperor Reizei became aware that Genji was his real father. Reizei fell in agony, and at last accepted the fact. Reizei raised Umetsubo to the Empress consort for she was Genji's daughter in low. Umetsubo became Akikonomu-chuuguu. Genji became de-facto-Ex-Emperor, Rokujou-in.
  • Kumoi-no-Kari - daughter of Tou-no-chuujou. Younger sister of shin-Kokiden-nyougo. She fell in love with Yuugiri, the son of Genji. She married Yuugiri.
  • Tamakadura - daughter of Tou-no-chuujou and Yuugao. Beautiful young lady. She left Kyoto for Dazai-fu at Kyushu in her very young age. After having grown up and become a young lady she returned to Kyoto. Genji found her and announced she was her daughter. Many high rank noblemen sent love-letters to her. Royal army General at the left, Kurohige, proposed her and kidnapped her.
  • San-no-miya

Relations maps of characters

Characters appeared in the Tale of Genji are many and their relations are highly complicated. The following lists/maps show the rough overview of their relations.

Emperor Kiritsubo and Hikaru Genji

Emperor Kiritsubo has many wives, representatively three ladies are important:
  • Kokiden-nyougo, 1st class concubine, mother of Emperor Suzaku, She is later Grand Empress consort
  • Kiritsubo-koui, 2nd class concubine, mother of Genji
  • Fujitsubo-nyougo, Royal princess, 1st class concubine, mother of Emperor Reizei, She is later Empress consort

Emperor Kiritsubo has at least 10 sons, representatively five princes are important:
  1. 1st son, Emperor Suzaku, child of Kokiden-nyougo
  2. 2nd son, Hikaru Genji, child of Kiritsubo-koui
  3. ?th son, Sochi-no-miya (Prince Lord Minister of Dazaifu)
  4. 8th son, Hachi-no-miya (Eighth Royal prince)
  5. 9th son (maybe), Emperor Reizei, child of Fujitsubo-nyougo, really, son of Genji


Hikaru Genji has many wives and loves, representatively following ladies are important:
  • 1st formal spouse, high Dame Aoi (Aoi no ue), mother of Yuugiri, daughter of the Minister at the left
  • 2nd formal spouse, high Dame Murasaki (Murasaki no ue), no child, informal daughter of Prince Lord Minister of Ceremony
  • 3rd formal spouse, Royal princess San-no-miya (third Royal princess), mother of Kaoru (real father of Kaoru is but Kashiwagi), daughter of Emperor Suzaku
  • spouse, Dame Hana-chiru-sato, no child
  • spouse, Dame Akashi (Akashi-no-onkata), mother of Akashi-no-nyougo, daughter of Priest Akashi
  • love, Rokujou-miyasudokoro, mother of Umetsubo-nyougo (her father is former Crown Prince)
  • love, Lady Oborodukiyo (Chief Lady of Chamber), no child, daughter of the Minister at the right
  • love, Lady Suetsumu-hana, no child, daughter of Hitachi-no-miya (Royal Prince Hitachi)
  • love, Lady Utsusemi, no child, daughter of middle class nobleman
  • love, Lady Yuugao, mother of Tamakadura (her father is Tou-no-chuujou)
  • secret love, Empress consort Fujitsubo, mother of Emperor Reizei, daughter of the former Emperor

Hikaru Genji has three children. Officially his children are two.
  1. 1st son, Emperor Reizei, child of Fujitsubo-chuuguu, child of adultery
  2. 2nd son, Yuugiri, child of high Dame Aoi (Aoi no ue),
  3. 1st daughter, Akashi-no-nyougo, child of Dame Akashi (Akashi-no-onkata)
  4. daughter in law, Umetsubo-nyougo, child of Rokujou-miyasudokoro and former Crown Prince, later Empress consort Akikonomu of Emperor Reizei

Other characters

The house of the Minister at the left (Sa-daijin) and the house of the Minister at the right (U-daijin) are rival. Genji's first formal spouse (high Dame Aoi) is daughter of the Sa-dijin and his love Lady Oborodukiyo is daughter of U-daijin, in addition Oborodukiyo is love of Emperor Suzaku who is son of Kokiden-nyougo.

Sa-daijin (Minister at the left) has at least two children.
  1. Tou-no-chuujou, rival and friend of Genji
  2. Aoi, (high Dame Aoi), 1st formal spouse of Genji, mother of Yuugiri


U-daijin (Minister at the right) has at least two daughters.
  1. Kokiden-nyougo, mother of Emperor Suzaku
  2. Lady Oborodukiyo, love of Genji and Emperor Suzaku


Tou-no-chuujou has at least five children.
  1. Kashiwagi, father of Kaoru, Kaoru's mother is San-no-miya (Kaoru is chlld of adultery)
  2. Koubai-dainagon
  3. (shin) Kokinden-nyougo, 1st class concubine of Emperor Reizei
  4. Dame Kumoi-no-Kari, formal spouse of Yuugiri
  5. Dame Tamakadura, daughter of Yuugao, 2nd formal spouse of Kurohige


Emperor Suzaku has at least three chldren.
  1. Tou-guu (Crown Prince), later Emperor
  2. 2nd daughter, Ni-no-miya (second Royal princess) alias Ochiba-no-miya
  3. 3rd daughter, San-no-miya (third Royal princess), 3rd formal spouse of Genji

Terms in Heian Peers

Basic terms
  • Tei, Mikado (帝) : Emperor
  • Official spouses of emperor: There are some classes of official spouses.
    • Chuuguu (中宮), or Kougou (皇后) : Empress consort, formal spouse, highest rank, member of royal family
    • Nyougo (女御) : 1st class concubine, usually royal princess or daughter of highest rank house
    • Koui (更衣) : 2nd class concubine, usually daughter of middle rank house
    • Naishi-no-kami (尚侍) : Chief Lady of Chamber, Emperor's Secretary in chief, sometimes informal 1st class concubine
    • Naishi-no-suke (典侍) : Deputy Lady of Chamber, Emperor's deputy Secretary
  • Shinnou (親王) : Royal prince, son of emperor/royal prince, authorized by emperor
  • Nai-shinnou (内親王) : Royal princess, daughter of emperor/royal prince, authorized by emperor
  • Miya (宮) : Royal prince/princess, house of emperor/royal family
  • Ichi-no-miya (一宮) : eldest Royal prince/princess
  • Ni-no-miya (二宮) : second Royal prince/princess
  • San-no-miya (三宮) : third Royal prince/princess
  • Joukou (上皇) : Ex-emperor/Ex-empress
  • In (院) : title name of Ex-emperor, palace of Ex-emperor
    • Kiritsubo-tei (桐壺帝) : Emperor Kiritsubo
    • Kiritsubo-in (桐壺院) : Ex-Emperor Kiritsubo
    • Suzaku-tei (朱雀帝) : Emperor Suzaku
    • Reizei-tei (冷泉帝) : Emperor Reizei
    • Rokujou-in (六條院) : Ex-Emperor Rokujou (de-facto-Ex-Emperor title of Hikaru Genji)
  • Otodo, Daijin (大臣) : Minister
    • Dajou-daijin (太政大臣) : Grand Minister
    • Sa-daijin (左大臣) : Minister at the left, higher rank than U-daijin
    • U-daijin (右大臣) : Minister at the right
    • Shikibukyou (式部卿) : Lord Minisiter of Ceremony
    • Shikibukyou-no-miya (式部卿宮) : Prince Lord Minister of Ceremony
  • Ue (上) : literally "up", "the high", in the case of "/female name/+no+Ue", formal spouse of highest rank person, such as formal spouse of Grand Minister
    • Aoi-no-ue (葵の上) : formal spouse of Hikaru Genji, Genji later became Grand Minister and Ex-Emperor
    • Murasaki-no-ue (紫の上) : de-facto-formal spouse of Hikaru Genji, Murasaki is but not so high rank as that of Aoi. Aoi is a daughter of Grand Minister and Royal princess. Murasaki is an informal daughter of Royal prince and a daughter of middle class peer.

Origin of title

The title "Asaki yume mishi" comes from the Iroha
Iroha
The is a Japanese poem, probably written in the Heian era . Originally the poem was attributed to the founder of the Shingon Esoteric sect of Buddhism in Japan, Kūkai, but more modern research has found the date of composition to be later in the Heian Period. The first record of its existence...

poem.
Iro ha nihoheto chirinuru wo wakayo .... uwi no okuyama kefu koete, Asaki yume mishi wehi mo sesu.
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