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AN00100104-19620300-0069  
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Title
Title 養鸕考 : 鵜飼研究序説  
Kana ウガイ コウ : ウカイ ケンキュウ ジョセツ  
Romanization Ugai ko : ukai kenkyu josetsu  
Other Title
Title Some remarks on the fishing with cormorant in Asia  
Kana  
Romanization  
Creator
Name 可兒, 弘明  
Kana カニ, ヒロアキ  
Romanization Kani, Hiroaki  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大學文學部  
Affiliation (Translated) Keio gijuku University  
Role  
Link  
Edition
 
Place
東京  
Publisher
Name 三田史学会  
Kana ミタ シガクカイ  
Romanization Mita shigakukai  
Date
Issued (from:yyyy) 1962  
Issued (to:yyyy)  
Created (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Updated (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Captured (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Physical description
 
Source Title
Name 史学  
Name (Translated)  
Volume 34  
Issue 3/4  
Year 1962  
Month 3  
Start page 69(323)  
End page 114(368)  
ISSN
03869334  
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Abstract
Of all the peoples of the world, the Asian is the only one that has brought the cormorants into a complete and perfect state of domestication. Japan has been an active center of cormorant breeding and fishing ever since the Yamato (大和) dynasty. In China, the center of cormorant fishing has been the lower Yangtse basin including the province of An-hui (安徽). Chiang-si (江西), Che-chiang (浙江), and Chiang-su (江蘇). From Che-chiang the practice spreads southward to the provinces, Fu-chien (福建) and Kwang-tung (広東). In the province of Se-ch'wan (四川) and Yun-nan (雲南), certain places have been noted for the excellance of the cormorants which are bred and trained for fishing. On the whole, cormorant fishing has occured intensly in southern and western China. The south-westernmost point to which the trained cormorants advance is Hanoi (河内) on Song-koi R., Indo-China. In 1931, B. Laufer has published an interesting article on relation of Japanese to Chinese cormorant fishing. The paper treats of this subject from the view-point of fishing method and process of domestication; it argues as follow. Chinese method of breeding, training and fishing are at variance with that of Japan. These two are absolutely different. But his conclution is based on the wrong premisses that the Japanese practice can be defined under the name of harness or team method. In Japan, there is no doubt that a good many local veriations exist in fishing method (cf. Table 1). Most writers who have described Japanese fishing with cormorant fail to mention these various variants. A (Free method) In this method, the birds are always free. A1 A fisherman ties with a cord round the bird's throat not to be able to swallow the fish. Next he let the cormorants loose into the water. Straightway they begin to dive autonomously and catch a great number of fish. This was once practised on Lake Suwa (諏訪) and now in the R. Takatsu (高津), Shimane Pref.. A2 Here the cormorants are only used for chasing. They do not catch fishes by themselves but give chase to fish. Being frightened at a flock of bird, fishes are driven into the nets. A3 Also cormorants are used for rousing fish. But some of them catch fishes. Certain places are noted for this method; amongst these we can name Chikugo (筑後) and Suruga (駿河). A4 This is the similar fishing to A1 and A2. Instead of using cormorants, chase-lines or bamboo poles are prepared for this fishing. The line is called "Unawa" (cormorant rope) and some of them wear the feathers of cormorant. On the top of chase bamboo-pole calling "Uzao" (cormorant pole), sometimes there attaches black charm as a symbol of cormorant. Using those chase-implements, the fishermen rouse the fishes and cacth them by nets. B (Intermediate method) This is a kind of tether method, but they use the chase implements and nets at same time. The Matsura (松浦) River, Hizen (肥前) Province, is noted for this fishing. C (Tether method) This is the most typical fishing with cormorant in Japan. A cord or rein of Japanese cypress fiber, about 12 feets long, is attached to the body of each bird. C1 During daytime, a fisherman cross over the shallow by wading. Manipulating the rein, he uses one or two cormorants. C2 Fishermen go up the river on a boat. On the head of the boat, there hangs out a burning torch. One of them lowers the cormorant one by one into a stream, altogether a team of twelve, and gathers all reins in his left hand, manipulating the various lines thereafter with his right hand, as occasion requires, to keep them free of tangles. Those varying practices, I think, are the index of various stages through which the development of the cormorant utilization has run. It is not difficult for us to imagine what the steps in the primeval process of cormorant fishing have been. Japan may has evolved a method of using cormorant as follow.[figure] The most archetype might be the free method which I named A1. This method of using cormorant is known everywhere in China. On comparing the fishing method of Japan with those of China, the author comes to conclution that the method of fishing with cormorant in Japan is not fundamentally and radically dif- frent from that of China. Thus Chinese and Japanese utilization of the cormorant might have the same basis of origin. However, author has not failed to point out the close resemblance between China and Japan, nor does he lose sight of peculiar growth in Japan. Table 1 [table]
 
Table of contents
序章 鵜羽呪術の展開
本論 鵜飼技法の比較考察
 I 中國鵜飼技法の検討
  歴史的資料
  慣行地の分布
  ウの馴致過程
  技法上の特色
  驅使形態の特色
  併用される漁具・漁法
 II 日本鵜飼の諸檢討
  A群(放ち鵜飼)
  B群(中間形態)
  C群(繋ぎ鵜飼)
  驅使形態の發展段階
  ウの捕獲と馴致
 III 鵜飼の文化的要素
  一元的發生
  Non Han (漢) Chinese Culture としての鵜飼
  日本的發達の諸相
 
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日本語  
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Journal Article  
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Last modified date
Dec 07, 2011 09:00:00  
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Dec 07, 2011 09:00:00  
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Index
/ Public / Faculty of Letters / The historical science / 34 (1961) / 34(3/4) 196203
 
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