Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 7.djvu/472

 *Miyōchin. Munetoshi or KunLinichi. (23), 1650. Worked in Yedo.
 * Miyōchin. Munenushi. 1650. Second son of Muneshige.
 * Miyōchin. Munemasa. 1650. Third son of Muneshige.
 * Miyōchin. Munesuke (24). 1710. Worked in Yedo. Had rank of Osumi no Kami.
 * Miyōchin. Munemasa (25). 1730. Second son of Munesuke. Worked in Yedo, and had rank of Osumi no Kami.
 * Miyōchin. Munemasa (26). 1740. Worked in Yedo. Had rank of Nagato no Kami. Called also Seijiro.
 * Miyōchin. Munetaye (27). 1760. Had rank of Osumi no Kami.
 * Miyōchin. Pupils of Yoshimichi. 1500. Kyoto.
 * Yoshikatsu.
 * Yoshimichi.
 * Yoshiiye.
 * Miyōchin. Pupils of Nobuiye. 1520. Joshiu.
 * Iyefusa.
 * Nobutada.
 * Nobuyuki.
 * Nobumasa.
 * Nobutsuna.
 * Nobumitsu.
 * Miyōchin. Pupils of Narishige. 1500. Kozuke.
 * Nariyoshi.
 * Naritada.
 * Naritsugu.
 * Munehisa.
 * Munetoki.
 * Miōju. Vide Shigeyoshi Umetada (Hikujiro).
 * Mizuno. Family name. Vide Yoshishige.
 * Mizuno. Gesshiu. Present day. A skilled sculptor in metal. Pupil of Unno Shōmin.
 * Mogarashi. Vide Sōden.
 * Mori. Joken. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Tokyo. Also skilled as a wood-carver.
 * Moriaki. Ishiguro. 1820. Torajiro. Yedo.
 * Moriakira. Kuwamura. 1640. Jihei. A great expert. Son of Morihiro. Kaga.
 * Morichika. Inouye. 1860. A skilled expert of Tokyo. Pupil of Arichika.
 * Morihira. Katsugi. 1720. Iyemon. Kaga.
 * Morihiro. Kuwamura, 1620. Jihei. Art name, Riyōyū. A skilled expert not inferior to his brother Morikatsu. Kaga.
 * Morikata. Yoshishige. 1690. Genshiro. Kaga.
 * Morikatsu. Kuwamura. 1620. Matsushiro, and afterwards Choyemon. A celebrated carver. Art name, Riyōyū. Kaga.
 * Morikatsu. Murata. 1780. A pupil of the Shōami family of Iyo. Used the mark Murata Rō, or the “old man Murata.”
 * Morikuni. Katsugi. 1740. Tozayemon. Kaga.
 * Morikuni. Katsugi. 1770. Tozayemon. Some very beautiful iron guards by this expert are in existence. Kaga.
 * Morikuni. Shōami. 1730. Sōsho. A great master in carving dragons and clouds. Matsuyama (Iyo). Marked his work Shōami Sōsho.
 * Morimichi. Kuwamura. 1660. Zenji. A celebrated expert, not inferior to his brother Moriyuki. Kaga.
 * Morimichi. Sato. 1810. Yaichiro. Mito.
 * Morimine. Shōami. 1600. Founded the Iyo branch of the Shōami family, and is therefore sometimes spoken of as the “Second Founder” of the family (vide Takatsune and Norisada). Worked at Matsuyama.
 * Morimine. Shōami. 1640. Worked at Matsuyama in Iyo.
 * Morimitsu. Katsugi. 1650. Hachibei. A pupil of Morisada Hanshiro. Kaga.
 * Morimitsu. Kuwamura. 1660. Kinshiro. A good carver. Pupil of Kōko. Kaga.
 * Morimitsu. Katsugi. 1680. Kanyemon. A skilled expert: at first an inlayer, and afterwards a carver. Worked originally in Kaga, and then entered the service of the feudal chief of Toyama.
 * Morimura. Yukimori. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
 * Morisada. Katsugi. 1690. Yoshiro, and afterwards Hanshiro. A skilled artist; grandson of Morisada Yozayemon. He entered the service of the feudal chief of Toyama. His son of the same name (Hanshiro) succeeded him. There were