The Man'yōshū and Non-Western Anthology Traditions

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The Man'yōshū ('Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves'), compiled in Japan around 759 CE, is the oldest surviving poetry anthology in continuous use anywhere in the world — predating Tottel's Miscellany, the first printed English anthology, by roughly 800 years. Alongside Persian, Chinese, and Arabic anthology traditions, it demonstrates that the poetry anthology as a form is far older and more global than the English-language canon typically presented in Western literary history.

Overview

Compiled during Japan's Nara period and completed around 759 CE, the Man'yōshū (万葉集, "Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves") is Japan's oldest surviving poetry anthology and one of the oldest anthologies of any kind still read today. It gathers over 4,500 poems by more than 400 named and anonymous poets — emperors, court nobles, soldiers, farmers, and unnamed commoners alike — composed from as early as the 5th century CE. Its compilation is traditionally associated with the poet and statesman Ōtomo no Yakamochi, though it likely reflects the work of multiple compilers over generations.

Contents and Structure

The anthology is organized into 20 scrolls containing primarily tanka (short 31-syllable poems) alongside longer chōka and some Chinese-style kanshi composed by Japanese poets. Unlike later, more formally curated imperial anthologies, the Man'yōshū notably includes poems by ordinary people — border guards, farmers, and women of varied social rank — alongside emperors and aristocrats, giving it a social breadth unusual for its era anywhere in the world.

Successors and the Wider Japanese Tradition

The Man'yōshū established a durable Japanese court tradition of imperially commissioned poetry anthologies. The Kokin Wakashū ("Collection of Old and New Japanese Poems," c. 905 CE) followed as the first of the "twenty-one imperial anthologies," containing 1,111 poems organized by topic across 20 scrolls — a far more curated, courtly counterpart to the Man'yōshū's rougher social range. This tradition of state-sponsored anthology-making persisted in Japan for nearly 500 years, a continuity with no direct Western parallel until the modern academic anthology.

Parallel Non-Western Anthology Traditions

The Man'yōshū is one node in a much broader global anthology history largely absent from English-language literary education. Chinese poetry has its own multi-millennial anthology tradition (compiled and recompiled across dynasties, later gathered for Western readers in collections like Burton Watson's The Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry and David Hinton's Classical Chinese Poetry). Persian poetry — including Hafez, Rūmī, and Rudākī — has been anthologized and translated into English since the 18th century, notably through Sir William Jones's 1771 translations and, more recently, Coleman Barks's hugely popular The Essential Rumi. Broader "world poetry" anthologies, such as Mark Van Doren's An Anthology of World Poetry and World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time (Washburn, Gross, Major, Fadiman), attempt to gather these traditions — more than 80% originally non-English — into a single English-language volume.

Historical Significance

These non-Western anthology traditions complicate the standard Western narrative in which the anthology form begins with Tottel's Miscellany in 1557. The Man'yōshū alone predates Tottel by roughly 800 years, and imperial Japanese anthology-making was already a mature, continuous institutional practice for centuries before English printers discovered the commercial anthology. Similarly, translation efforts by poets like Ezra Pound (Cathay, 1915) show how non-Western anthologized poetry directly shaped Western modernism — Chinese poetry in translation was a formative influence on Imagism and subsequent American free verse.

Legacy

Modern English-language anthologies increasingly acknowledge this wider history, but non-Western and translated traditions remain comparatively underrepresented in general poetry-anthology reference works. Understanding the Man'yōshū, the Persian ghazal tradition, and classical Chinese anthology-making is essential to any complete account of how the anthology form developed globally — not as an English invention, but as a convergent practice that arose independently across cultures, often centuries before its English-language counterpart.

Related Anthologies

Tottel's Miscellany, The Waste Land and Modernist Poetry Anthologies

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Man'yōshū?
The Man'yōshū ("Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves") is Japan's oldest surviving poetry anthology, compiled around 759 CE. It contains over 4,500 poems by more than 400 poets across all social classes, from emperors to common soldiers and farmers.
Is the Man'yōshū older than English poetry anthologies?
Yes, by roughly 800 years. Tottel's Miscellany (1557), the first printed English poetry anthology, appeared centuries after the Man'yōshū and the subsequent Japanese imperial anthology tradition were already well established.
What are other major non-Western poetry anthology traditions?
Classical Chinese poetry has been compiled and recompiled across dynasties for millennia; Persian poetry (Hafez, Rūmī, Rudākī) has its own deep anthology tradition; and general 'world poetry' anthologies like Mark Van Doren's An Anthology of World Poetry attempt to gather these traditions in English translation for Western readers.

Last updated: 2026-07-01