Norinaga was born in what is now
Matsusaka in
Ise Province (now part of
Mie Prefecture). His ancestors were vassals of the
Kitabatake clan in
Ise Province for many generations. However, in the early
Edo period they abandoned their
samurai status, changing their surname to Ozu, and relocated to Matsusaka, where they became cotton wholesalers. The family initially prospered and had a store in Edo as well. (The film director
Yasujirō Ozu was a descendant of the same line). After his elder brother's death, Norinaga succeeded to the Ozu line. At one stage he was adopted out to a paper-making family but the bookish boy was not suited to business. It was at his mother's suggestion that, at the age of 22, Norinaga went to
Kyoto to study medicine. In Kyoto, he also studied Chinese and Japanese
philology under the
neo-Confucianist Hori Keizan. It was at this time that Norinaga became interested in the Japanese classics and decided to enter the field of under the influence of
Ogyū Sorai and
Keichū. (With changes in the language, the ancient classics were already poorly understood by Japanese in the Edo period and texts needed philological analysis in order to be properly understood.) Life in Kyoto also instilled in the young Norinaga a love of traditional Japanese court culture. Returning to Matsusaka, Norinaga opened a medical practice for infants while devoting his spare time to lectures on
The Tale of Genji and studies of the (
Chronicles of Japan). At the age of 27, he bought several books by
Kamo no Mabuchi and embarked on his researches. As a doctor, he reassumed his ancestral samurai surname of Motoori. In 1763, Norinaga met Mabuchi in person when the latter visited Matsusaka, a meeting that has come down in history as 'the night in Matsusaka'. Norinaga took the occasion to ask Mabuchi to supervise his annotations of the ("Records of Ancient Matters"). Mabuchi suggested that Norinaga should first tackle the annotations to the ''
Man'yōshū'' in order to accustom himself to the ancient
kana usage known as the
man'yōgana. This was the only meeting between the two men, but they continued to correspond and, with Mabuchi's encouragement, Norinaga later went on to full-fledged research into the . Norinaga's disciples included Ishizuka Tatsumaro,
Nagase Masaki, Natsume Mikamaro, Takahashi Mikiakira and
Motoori Haruniwa (Norinaga's son). Although overshadowed by his activities as a scholar, Norinaga spent 40 years as a practicing doctor in Matsusaka and was seeing patients until ten days before his death in 1801. ==Works==