Kokan was the son of an officer of the palace guard and a mother of the aristocratic
Minamoto clan. At age eight he was placed in the charge of the Buddhist priest Hōkaku on Mt. Hiei. At age ten he was ordained there, but later began study with the
Zen master Kian at the
Nanzenji monastery. Kokan Shiren's talents came to the attention of the
Emperor Kameyama. At age seventeen he began extensive Chinese studies. Thus began a long career of travel and the establishment of Zen institutions all across Japan. He became abbot at many of the best Zen establishments. At the end of his life, the emperor Gomurakami conferred upon him the title
kokushi or National Teacher. Yet in his writings Kokan showed an aloofness from prestige with a striving for inner freedom. The best of his
poetry in Chinese dates from late in his life when he had withdrawn from ecclesiastical affairs. His poetry and essays were collected under the title
Saihokushū. He is also credited with other contributions to lexography in his lifetime. by Kokan Kokan studied under the celebrated Chinese monk
Yishan Yining. Their relationship can be regarded as the beginning of the golden age of the Literature of the Five Mountains in Japan. He studied calligraphy under an additional Chinese master Huang Shangu. Other works include Japan's first rhymed verse
Jubun-in-ryaku in five volumes,
Kokan Osho Juzenshiroku in three volumes, and the eighteen-volume
Butsugo Shinron. A portrait of Kokan Shiren is in the Kaizoin of the
Tōfuku-ji Temple in Kyoto, Japan. Kokan is noted for writing the
Genko Shakusho, the oldest extant account of Buddhism in Japan. In the introduction to the work, Kokan wrote that he was shamed into writing it after the Chinese monk Yishan Yining expressed his surprise that no such history existed in Japan. In 1322, he completed the
Genko Shakusho; it was completed in the
Genko era, whence the era name in its title. ==Rhymeprose on a Miniature Landscape Garden==