A distinctive form of Japanese calligraphy, the …

Years: 1156 - 1167

A distinctive form of Japanese calligraphy, the phonetic "kana" script, emerges from abbreviation of the cumbersome usage of Chinese characters as phonetic symbols.

Heian noblewomen develop kana into a respectable mode for poems, diaries, and romances.

Once the ability to compose short poems, written in a cultivated hand, becomes a requirement in Japanese social exchanges, major kana script masters, such as Fujiwara no Yukinari, emerge in the eleventh century.

Classical Japanese poems come to be rendered in the kana script on increasingly finely decorated paper, as in, for example, the celebrated famous "Thirty-Six Poets" anthology.

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