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Rennyo and Ofumi: Research Log

A public record of the questions, source selection, rejected evidence, decision criteria, and update conditions behind this article.

Environment

Research Instruction

The request asked who Rennyo was, how to understand the contents of Gobunsho or Ofumi, how he lived, what thought he taught, how he affected the religious world, how his life ended, and how all of this related to Japan’s situation at the time. The report needed one consistent theme.

Research Steps

  1. Read the repo-local research-report and stop-slop instructions.
  2. Checked existing article frontmatter, bilingual structure, source notes, research logs, and MIX alignment.
  3. Checked the Hongwanji-ha Research Institute, Hongwanji-ha official materials, Hongwanji English history, Fukui Prefectural History, Kyoto City urban history, Wikisource text, and Wikimedia Commons image source.
  4. Reduced Rennyo’s chronology to turning points related to Ofumi, Yoshizaki, Yamashina, Ishiyama, and Ikko ikki tension.
  5. Wrote the Japanese article as the source version and synchronized the English version with the same structure.

Decisions

The theme is that Ofumi turned wartime anxiety into the form of shinjin and community. This frame connects the contents of the letters, daily service, lay meetings, follower communities, and political conditions in one line.

The Ikko ikki is not described as a revolt simply commanded by Rennyo. The report presents the organization of followers, the political force this created, and Rennyo’s attempt to restrain the movement as separate points.

Remaining Limits

The report does not give a detailed account of the dating of individual letters, manuscript and printed-version differences, differences among Jodo Shinshu branches, or the full modern scholarship on Rennyo. A deeper version could add work by Minor and Ann Rogers, James C. Dobbins, and university research journals.