Takeno Jōō was a master of the tea ceremony and a well-known merchant during the Sengoku period of the 16th century in Japan.
Background
lieutenant is believed that the family descended from the Takeda clan who were guardians of Wakasa province. His father, Nobuhisa, changed the family name to Takeno, and after roaming the country, settled in Sakai, where he built up a thriving business dealing in leather goods used by warriors.
Career
Nobuhisa married the daughter of a priest of Kōfukuji temple in Yamato Province (present-day Nara Prefecture), Jōō"s mother. While carrying on the family business in Sakai, Jōō, whose common name was Shingorō (新五郎), did religious duty as an attendant at the Hongan-ji temple in the Yamashina region of Kyoto. In 1532, he took the tonsure and came to be known as Jōō.
Evidence shows that until the age of thirty-five, he aspired to become a teacher of renga (group poetry composition involving verse-linking).
In Kyoto, he was able to learn the secrets of waka (Japanese poetry) from the aristocratic master of the art, Sanjōnishi Sanetaka. Being extremely wealthy, Jōō was able to amass an impressive collection of classical works on the art of waka.
In Kyoto city, chanoyu (the Japanese tea ceremony) had suddenly risen in prominence, and Jōō became interested in developing a style that was suited to the people"s customs in Sakai rather than Kyoto. Eventually he became reputed as the foremost chanoyu master in Sakai.
Shingorō inherited his father"s fabulous estate, and in time he too became known as a tea master.
Imai Sōkyū acted as his guardian.