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The relationship between elite and vernacular house-types in pre-modern Japan

The relationship between elite and vernacular house-types in pre-modern Japan

著者
Morris, Martin N. [著]
原本の出版年月日
1995
製作者
国立国会図書館

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書誌情報

資料種別
博士論文
タイトル
The relationship between elite and vernacular house-types in pre-modern Japan
著者標目
出版年月日等
1995
出版年(W3CDTF)
1995
並列タイトル等
サービス部分の建築的性格と含まれ方が語る近世以前の日本におけるエリートとバナキュラ住居の相互関係の研究
授与機関名
東京大学
授与年月日
平成7年3月16日
報告番号
甲第10893号
学位
博士 (工学)
出版地(国名コード)
JP
NDLC
UT51
一般注記
博士論文
国立国会図書館永続的識別子
info:ndljp/pid/3115074
コレクション(共通)
障害者向け資料
コレクション(障害者向け資料:レベル1)
コレクション(障害者向け資料:レベル2)
コレクション(個別)
国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション > デジタル化資料 > 博士論文
受理日(W3CDTF)
2011-12-05T15:19:08+09:00
記録形式(IMT)
image/jp2
デジタル化資料送信
図書館・個人送信対象
請求記号
UT51-96-Q152
連携機関・データベース
国立国会図書館 : 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション

目次

  • CONTENTS:

    p2

  • ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    p4

  • INTRODUCTION

    p6

  • CHAPTER I:THE INTEGRATED SERVICE ZONE AND THE VERNACULAR HOUSE

    p16

  • 1)The hearth,the dwelling and the genesis of the integrated kitchen

    p17

  • 2)The pit-dwelling as a vernacular type and the advent of the kamado

    p25

  • 3)Raised-floor dwellings,ground-floor dwellings and the decline and transmutation of the pit-dwelling

    p35

  • 4)Doma,ima and heya

    p52

  • 5)Substantial integrated nôka

    p64

  • 6)Substantial integrated machiya

    p69

  • 7)Substantial integrated bukeyashiki

    p72

  • 8)Substantial integrated priestly and monastic houses

    p75

  • 9)The vernacular house with integrated service:an interim appraisal

    p78

  • CHAPTER II:HOUSES OF THE PEOPLE, KITCHENS OF THE GREAT:-UPPER-CLASS SERVICE BUILDINGS & VERNACULAR HOUSES IN EDO PERIOD JAPAN

    p79

  • 1)The upper-class daidokoro and the vernacular house

    p80

  • 2)The upper-class daidokoro in context:its place in the Edo period'great house'

    p94

  • 3)Minka as daidokoro:house and reception building at the vernacular level in the Edo period

    p125

  • 4)Mirror of the secular:service structures in shrine and temple

    p128

  • 5)An equation and its implications

    p133

  • CHAPTER III:THE UPPER-CLASS KITCHEN CUM SERVICE ZONE:-AN OUTLINE OF ITS DEVELOPMENT TO THE END OF THE HEIAN PERIOD

    p135

  • 1)The service zone and service structures in the nascent upper-class compounds of proto-historic Japan

    p136

  • 2)The service zone in the imperial palaces of the Ritsuryo state

    p152

  • 3)The service zones of elite houses in the capital and provinces in the ancient period

    p166

  • 4)The development of the service zone in ancient temples

    p185

  • 5)The development of the service zone in ancient shrines

    p192

  • 6)The character of the ancient elite service zone

    p225

  • CHAPTER IV:THE RISE OF A COMPOSITE ELITE SERVICE STRUCTURE IN THE MEDIAEVAL PERIOD

    p229

  • 1)Tracing back the composite daidokoro

    p230

  • 2)Factors behind the development of the composite daidokoro

    p246

  • 3)The generation of the composite service structure and the processes involved

    p270

  • 4)The vernacular connection

    p293

  • CHAPTER V:MULTI-STRUCTURE HOUSES AND THEIR AMALGAMATION AT THE VERNACULAR LEVEL

    p306

  • 1)Buntôgata minka:service and served divided at the vernacular level in the Edo period

    p307

  • 2)The roots and significance of buntô

    p319

  • 3)Fusion and the generation of substantial integrated vernacular house-types

    p358

  • 4)Substantial integrated house-types as products of fusion

    p370

  • 5)Houses within houses: nestedness and the hierarchy of house-types

    p409

  • CHAPTER VI:THE JUXTAPOSITION OF SERVICE AND SERVED AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ELITE HOUSE

    p416

  • 1)Mediaeval and early-modern layout types compared

    p417

  • 2)The juxtaposition of service and served: an overview

    p434

  • 3)A prototype for the omote goten and its implications

    p463

  • CONCLUSION

    p487

  • APPENDIX

    p500

  • JAPANESE SYNOPSIS

    p506

  • CONTENTS:

    p2

  • INTRODUCTION

    p3

  • CHAPTER I:THE INTEGRATED SERVICE ZONE AND THE VERNACULAR HOUSE

  • 1)The hearth,the dwelling and the genesis of the integrated kitchen

    p7

  • 2)The pit-dwelling as a vernacular type and the advent of the kamado

    p11

  • 3)Raised-floor dwellings,ground-floor dwellings and the decline and transmutation of the pit-dweiling

    p15

  • 4)Doma,ima and heya

    p27

  • 5)Substantial integrated nôka

    p34

  • 6)Substantial integrated machiya

    p41

  • 7)Substantial integrated bukeyashiki

    p47

  • 8)Substantial integrated priestly and monastic houses

    p51

  • CHAPTER II:HOUSES OF THE PEOPLE, KITCHENS OF THE GREAT:- UPPER-CLASS SERVICE BUILDINGS & VERNACULAR HOUSES IN EDO PERIOD JAPAN

    p58

  • 1)The upper-class daidokoro and the vernacular house

    p59

  • 2)The upper-class daidokoro in context:its place in the Edo period 'great house'

    p77

  • 3)Minka as daidokoro:house and reception building at the vernacular level in the Edo period

    p98

  • 4)Mirror of the secular:service structures in shrine and temple

    p105

  • CHAPTER III:THE UPPER-CLASS KITCHEN CUM SERVICE ZONE:- AN OUTLINE OF ITS DEVELOPMENT TO THE END OF THE HEIAN PERIOD

    p120

  • 1)The service zone and service structures in the nascent upper-class compounds of proto-historic Japan

    p121

  • 2)The service zone in the imperial palaces of the Ritsuryo state

    p134

  • 3)The service zones of elite houses in the capital and provinces in the ancient period

    p128

  • 4)The development of the service zone in ancient temples

    p141

  • 5)The development of the service zone in ancient shrines

    p150

  • CHAPTER IV:THE RISE OF A COMPOSITE ELITE SERVICE STRUCTURE IN THE MEDIAEVAL PERIOD

  • 1)Tracing back the composite daidokoro

    p175

  • 2)Factors behind the development of the composite daidokoro

    p185

  • 3)The generation of the composite service structure and the processes involved

    p206

  • 4)The vernacular connection

    p229

  • CHAPTER V:MULTI-STRUCTURE HOUSES AND THEIR AMALGAMATION AT THE VERNACULAR LEVEL

  • 1)Buntbgata minka:service and served divided at the vernacular level in the Edo period

    p237

  • 2)The roots and significance of buntô

    p258

  • 3)Fusion and the generation of substantial integrated vernacular house-types

    p285

  • 4)Substantial integrated house-types as products of fusion

    p288

  • 5)Houses within houses:nestedness and the hierarchy of house-types

    p319

  • CHAPTER VI:THE JUXTAPOSITION OF SERVICE AND SERVED AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ELITE HOUSE

  • 1)Mediaeval and early-modern layout types compared

    p320

  • 2)The juxtaposition of service and served:an overview

    p336

  • 3)A prototype for the omote goten and its implications

    p348

  • APPENDIX

    p361