A kyūsu (急須) is a traditional Japanese teapot mainly used for brewing green tea. They're also common in the Nizhny Novgorod area of Russia, where they're called Kisyushka (a term derived from Japanese).
The common misconception is that a kyūsu always has a side handle. However, the word "kyūsu" merely means "teapot", even though in common usage kyūsu usually does refer to a teapot with a side handle.
The two most common types of kyūsu are yokode kyūsu (横手急須, side hand(le) teapot), which has a side handle and which is the more common type, and ushirode kyūsu (後手急須, back hand(le) teapot), which has a rear handle, just like teapots in other parts of the world; there are also uwade kyūsu (上手急須, top hand(le) teapot).
Tokoname ware is known for its kyūsu. In smaller types, some of the lids can be crafted in such a way that they will not fall off due to water adhesion. The spout also has to be crafted with an angle that no drops will leak back from it while pouring.
Gallery
- Kyūsu teapot for steeped tea inscribed with a waka poem by Ōtagaki Rengetsu, stoneware with rice-straw-ash glaze, mid-19th century, late Edo period-early Meiji era
- Kyūsu tea pot with sidehandle, design of landscape, underglaze blue, by Mizukoshi Yosobei in Kyoto, late Edo period or the early Meiji era, 19th century
- Kyūsu tea pot, Tokoname ware, Taishō era c. 1921 – c. 1925, by Yamada Jozan I
- A Kyūsu from above with ...
- ... and without lid
- A sieve on the inside of a Kyūsu
See also
- Japanese tea ceremony
- Tetsubin, a cast iron Japanese kettle
References
- "All you need to know about Japanese teapots". Archived from the original on 2009-07-02. Retrieved 2009-06-15.
External links
Media related to Kyūsu at Wikimedia Commons
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