@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00015710, author = {羽賀, 祥二 and HAGA, Shoji}, journal = {名古屋大学文学部研究論集. 史学}, month = {Mar}, note = {This paper discusses the process how the imperial family tried to take serious consideration on the rice cultivating rites in the end of the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries. The rice farming rituals, Daijoo-sai and Niiname-sai, having of their origin in the ancient emperor system halted in the late medieval time. Reviving in the eighteenth century, they were placed in the center of the emperor's rituals. Furthermore, they took more developed shape in which ordinary people contributed new rice to the imperial family for the rituals in Meiji era. The paper concludes: (1) exemperors (Joukou) cultivated rice paddies in their residence (Sento-gosho). (2) that deeply reflected the contemporary society suffering from famines, and that encouraged the imperial family to save people from the famines, (3) the movement to conduct a rice cultivating rite, Sekiden no Rei, was prevailed among Daimyous, (4) a perspective that the raison d'être of the emperor is in conducting the rice cultivating rituals was advocated, (5) the imperial ritual system with featuring the rice cultivating rites was developed after the Meiji Restoration.}, pages = {123--148}, title = {天皇制と稲作儀礼}, volume = {59}, year = {2013} }