下級官人と月借銭 : 宝亀年間の一切経写経事業を中心に

書誌事項

タイトル別名
  • Lower level bureaucrats and pay day lending : The case of the Issaikyo sutra-copying project during ancient Japan's Hoki era
  • カキュウカンジン ト ツキ シャクセン : ホウキ ネンカン ノ イッサイキョウ シャキョウ ジギョウ オ チュウシン ニ

この論文をさがす

抄録

The Shosoin-Monjo (正倉院文書) collection of documents from the Hoki 宝亀 era (AD770-780) includes about 100 petitions by sutra-copiers requesting monthly loans (gesshaku-sen 月借銭) from the Sutra-Copying Bureau of Todaiji Temple. The loans were borrowed at high rates of interest with their salaries (fuse 布施), dwellings and allocations of rice paddy (kubunden 口分田) as security, and occasionally requiring cosignatories. Although the sutra-copiers who incurred such debt were regarded as low-ranking government officials and thus were bona-fide members of ancient Japan's ruling class, they were segregated from aristocrats of the fifth rank and above in terms of rights and privileges and were shut off from promotion above the sixth rank despite long years of service to the government, suggesting to researchers that low ranking bureaucrats composed an exploited sector of the ruling class, whose members were, as shown by the gesshaku-sen documents, living hand to mouth under conditions resembling debt slavery. In this article, the author reexamines whether or not these low ranking bureaucrats were really as poverty-stricken as thought, by trying to better understand the meaning of the Hoki era Issaikyo sutra-copying project and its political ramifications. The author then turns to an investigation of the Sutra-Copying Bureau's gesshaku-sen loan operations and the personal economic activities of its sutra-copiers, in order to clarify the bureau/money lender's relationship to its employee/borrowers and ultimately what importance gesshaku-sen had for low ranking bureaucrats in ancient Japan.

収録刊行物

  • 史学雑誌

    史学雑誌 122 (6), 1062-1082, 2013

    公益財団法人 史学会

詳細情報 詳細情報について

問題の指摘

ページトップへ