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Gusuku

Gusuku (グスク, 城, Okinawan: gushiku)[1] often refers to castles or fortresses in the Ryukyu Islands that feature stone walls. However, the origin and essence of gusuku remain controversial. In the archaeology of Okinawa Prefecture, the Gusuku period refers to an archaeological epoch of the Okinawa Islands that follows the shell-mound period and precedes the Sanzan period, when most gusuku are thought to have been built. Many gusuku and related cultural remains on Okinawa Island have been listed by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites under the title Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu.

Walls of Shuri Castle

Philological analysis Edit

The Yarazamori Gusuku Inscription (1554) contains phrases, "pile gusuku" (くすくつませ) and "pile up gusuku and ..." (くすくつみつけて); apparently, gusuku in these phrases refers to stone walls.[2] In the Omoro Sōshi (16th–17th centuries), the term gusuku is written as "くすく," or "ぐすく" in hiragana. Occasionally, the Chinese character "城" (castle) is assigned to it. In later ryūka and kumi odori, the reading shiro is also used for the same Chinese character.[citation needed] The references to gusuku in the Omoro Sōshi are mostly about castles and fortresses, but sacred places and places of worship are called gusuku as well. In some cases, gusuku simply refers to Shuri Castle.[3] The Liuqiu-guan yiyu, a Chinese dictionary, maps Chinese "皇城" (imperial palace) to the transcription "姑速姑" (gu-su-gu). Similarly, the Yiyu yinshi assigns "窟宿孤" (ku-su-gu) to "皇城."[3]

Etymology Edit

There is no consensus about the etymology of gusuku. Chamberlain analyzed the word as the combination of gu (< honorific go 御) and shuku (宿). Kanazawa Shōzaburō also segmented gusuku into gu and suku but considered that the latter half was cognate with Old Japanese shiki, in which ki was a loan from Old Korean. Iha Fuyū proposed that suku was cognate with soko (塞, fortress). Hirata Tsugumasa considered that suku was cognate with Japanese soko (底, bottom).[4] Similarly, Higashionna Kanjun raised doubts over the analysis of gu since older records always used honorific u (< o) instead of gu (< go). Nakahara Zenchū identified gu as go (stone).[4]

Common features Edit

 
Layout of Shuri Castle

Walls Edit

The most prominent feature of most gusuku is their wall(s). Gusuku walls are primarily made with Ryukyuan limestone and, sometimes, coral. There are three types of gusuku walls: aikata-zumi, nozura-zumi, and nuno-zumi.[5] Examples of each are Nakagusuku Castle, Nakijin Castle, Zakimi Castle, and parts of Shuri Castle. The shape of gusuku walls usually follows the contours of the land. They are usually thick, and sometimes have low parapets atop them. Some gusuku walls, like those of Nakagusuku Castle, were designed to resist cannon fire.

Bailey Edit

Gusuku have one or more baileys. The baileys of typical gusuku usually contained a residence, a well, an utaki, and storage buildings. Larger gusuku, like Nakijin Castle, could have more than five baileys, while smaller gusuku, like Iha Castle, had a single bailey.

Gates Edit

Gusuku have one or more entrances, often guarded by a heavy gate or gatehouse. Gates were the strongpoints of gusuku. Many gusuku, like Nakijin Castle, were adapted to have gun ports next to their gates.

Main Hall Edit

At the heart of most gusuku was the Main Hall (正殿, Seidan). The Main Hall was typically the residence of a feudal lord (Aji). The palace at Shuri Castle is the most prominent Main Hall, being the only one remaining, but the site of the Main Hall is very obvious at other gusuku, such as Katsuren Castle.

Utaki Edit

Almost all gusuku contain or are near an utaki (御嶽), shrines and sites of religious importance in the Ryukyuan religion. The relationship between utaki and gusuku has led some experts to question the origin and essence of gusuku.

Research Edit

Okinawa Islands Edit

Although it is widely recognized within the Okinawa Islands that gusuku are castles/fortresses, there is ample reason to question this perception. The origin and essence of gusuku were actively discussed in the 1960s and 70s and remain controversial.

Cultural geographer Nakamatsu Yashū claimed that the essence of gusuku was a sacred place. His theory was backed by decades of field work that was not limited to the Okinawa Islands but that extended to Amami, Miyako and Yaeyama. He revealed that an overwhelming majority of what were called gusuku by local communities did not look like castles or fortresses at all. In fact, they were too isolated from local communities, too small to live in and lacked water supply. Among hundreds of gusuku, only a dozen were fortifications. Each community usually had a gusuku. Gusuku were typically located on hills, but some were on sand dunes, on cliff edges, and in caves. In some communities, what were called gusuku were actually stone tombs. Nakamatsu explained the great diversity of gusuku by one feature in common: sacredness. According to Nakamatsu, a gusuku was in origin a place of "aerial burial." The reason that a dozen of gusuku were transformed into fortress/castle-like structures is unclear, but he conjectured that some rulers had expanded gusuku substantially by building their family residences around them. Shuri Castle, for example, encompasses sacred places such as Sui mui gusuku and Madan mui gusuku, which suggests the original nature of the castle.[6][7]

Archaeologists from Okinawa Prefecture have labeled some archaeological findings as gusuku. Takemoto Masahide claimed that gusuku were defensive communities. He classified what he considered gusuku into three types:

  • A: residence of political leaders, a fortress/castle with stone walls,
  • B: defensive community, and
  • C: place of ancestor worship or burial place.

According to Takemoto, Type B, which is overwhelming in number, appeared during the transitional period between primitive society and class society.[8] As noted by Asato Susumu, there is a significant gap in the use of the term gusuku. While Nakamatsu referred to limited space as gusuku, Takamoto applied the term to the whole archaeological site.[9]

Archaeologist Tōma Shiichi hypothesized that a gusuku was the residence of an aji (local ruler or warlord) and his family. Since most gusuku in the Okinawa Islands are accompanied with stone walls, he considered that the Gusuku Period was characterized by the formation of class society. Among archaeologists, however, Kokubu Naoichi supported Nakamatsu's theory considering poor living conditions of gusuku.[8] Asato Susumu expressed concern about the association of gusuku with class society because the emergence of political rulers was not well attested by archaeological findings but mostly based on literature that was written centuries later.[9]

Folklorist Kojima Yoshiyuki was also a supporter of the sacredness theory. However, he opposed to Nakamatsu's theory about the origin of gusuku as a burial place. He argued that the word gusuku originally meant stonework. Separately of this, local communities handed down mountain cult, which shared roots with that of Yakushima and by extension Japan. Some sacred mountains were later fortified with stone walls, and as a result, gusuku came to mean castles/fortresses.[2]

In any case, a flood of archaeological discoveries in the 1970s led Okinawan archaeologists to establish archaeological periods of the Okinawa Islands that were distinct from those of Japan (Amami and the Sakishima group also have unique archaeological periods distinct from Japan and one another). In their framework, the Gusuku period is an archaeological epoch of the Okinawa Islands, which they consider was characterized by the widespread appearance of gusuku, the widespread use of iron, and farming. It follows the Shell Mound period and precedes the Sanzan period. It is parallel with the late Heian to Muromachi periods of Japan. Also, the beginning of the Gusuku period corresponds to that of the Old Ryukyu period of Okinawan historiography, both beginning in 1187 with the semi-legendary ascension of King Shunten.

Takanashi Osamu, an Amami-based archaeologist, criticized the trend of Okinawan archaeology. The Gusuku period lacked clear markers of dating from an archaeological perspective. Pottery seriation, in particular, remained poorly understood. The contemporaneousness of stone walls and excavated potteries was not established. He also noted a bias of Okinawan archaeologists, who he thought were preoccupied with questions of how the Okinawa-centered kingdom of Ryukyu was formed.[10][11]

While typical castle/fortress-type gusuku in the Okinawa Islands were featured by stone walls, it was discovered in the 1980s and 90s that some fortifications in northern Okinawa Island lacked stone walls but instead were characterized by earthworks, kuruwa and dry moats. This style of fortifications is in fact rather common in Amami Ōshima and representative of medieval mountain fortifications (中世山城) of Japan. Naka Shōhachirō and Chinen Isamu, a historian and an archaeologist from Okinawa dated them to the late 12th to early 13th centuries and claimed that they were predecessors of gusuku with stone walls.[12] This view was actively criticized by Takanashi Osamu in the late 1990s and 2000s.[10][11]

Sakishima Islands Edit

Archaeological studies in the Sakishima Islands in southern Okinawa Prefecture are not so active as those in the main Okinawa Islands. Some Okinawa-led archaeological reports labeled some sites in Miyako and Yaeyama as "gusuku-like." Archaeologist Ono Masatoshi raised concern about the naïve application of the Okinawan gusuku-as-fortifications framework and urged that scholars should not turn a blind eye to the diversified nature of archaeological sites with stone walls in these islands.[13] Few gusuku sites can be attributed to the fact that the Sakishima Islands were over a hundred years behind Okinawa socially and technologically.[14] In 1500, Ryukyu invaded and annexed the islands, which would have limited further local gusuku development. The primary gusuku site in Yaeyama is Furusutobaru Castle, residence of Oyake Akahachi, which was attacked by Nakasone Toyomiya of Miyako shortly before the invasion by Ryukyu.[15][16]

Linguist Nakamoto Masachie noted that in some dialects of Yaeyama, gusuku/gushiku means stone walls themselves (not a structure with stone walls) and conjectured that this might be the original meaning of gusuku.[17] According to Ono Masatoshi, gusuku has various meanings, depending on dialects of Yaeyama, including a partition of a mansion and stone walls surrounding an agricultural field.[13] Nakamatsu Yashū claimed that suku-like word forms were more prominent in Miyako and Yaeyama than gusuku.[7]

Regardless of whether it is appropriate to call them gusuku, the Yaeyama Islands have archaeological remains with stone walls, such as Mashuku Village of Hateruma Island, Hanasuku and Gumaara Villages and Shinzato Villages of Taketomi Island. These villages were abandoned around the time of the conquest by the Ryukyu Kingdom. What are common to these villages are that they were located on top of cliffs, divided by inhomogeneous cell blocks and lacked roads. The whole village and each cell block were surrounded by stone walls.[13] This type of abandoned settlement can also be found on Miyako Island but they are rather exceptional.[18] The local people call these remains busu nu yashiki (bushi's mansion), busu nu yaa ishigaki (bushi's house's stone walls) or busu nu yaa (bushi's house), busu nu yama (bushi's mountain) in Ishigaki, bushin yaa (bushi's house) in Hatoma, nishi nu bushi nu yaa (bushi's house in the north) in Aragusuku.[19][better source needed]

In the archaeology of Yaeyama, human settlements prior to the conquest by Ryukyu are called "Suku Villages" because the names of these ruins have the suffix -suku.[20] By extension, the archaeological epoch of the Suku Culture (11–16th centuries) is sometimes used by archaeologists.[19]

Amami Islands Edit

Formal studies of gusuku in the Amami Islands group in southern Kagoshima Prefecture were started by Nakamatsu Yashū in the 1960s and 70s. He revealed that most of what were called gusuku by local communities of Amami were by no means fortifications. He also noted that Amami had -suku toponyms, which were otherwise considered specific to Miyako and Yaeyama.[6] However, his study on Amami went largely unnoticed.[10]

In the 1980s and 90s, Miki Yasushi, an expert of medieval mountain fortifications of Japan, extended his research to the Amami Islands, largely independently of Okinawan archaeology.[21] His comprehensive study found 129 gusuku toponyms in Amami Ōshima. Similarly, a 1982 research project by Kagoshima Prefecture covered 45 fortifications in Amami.[10] Miki carefully noted that, as Nakamatsu had shown, most of what were called gusuku were not fortifications, and that conversely, some fortifications were not called gusuku by the locals. A major difference from those in the Okinawa Islands was that gusuku in Amami (except those in Okinoerabu and Yoron) nearly completely lacked stone walls. As a historian from Japan, Miki took much notice of the religious nature of gusuku in Amami, which is completely absent from Japanese fortresses.[21]

Publications from Amami gained attention of some Okinawan archaeologists in the 1980s and 90s, and they attempted to place Amami's gusuku in the Okinawan gusuku-as-fortifications framework.[citation needed] Naka Shōhachiro investigated some gusuku in Amami Ōshima and discovered kuruwa and dry moats there. He claimed that the primary function of those gusuku was defensiveness, not religiousness as Nakamatsu claimed. He dated them to the late 12th to early 13th centuries and considered that they subsequently evolved into those with stone walls in Okinawa.[10] By contrast, Miki conjectured that the construction of these fortifications was triggered by repeated invasion by the Ryukyu Kingdom in the 15th and 16th centuries.[21]

In his survey of earlier studies, Takanashi Osamu criticized Naka's theory because his dating lacked evidence. In fact, gusuku with established dates were mostly from the 14th to 16th centuries. While other archaeologists had focused on mountain fortifications, he paid attention to gusuku in flat land. He also indicated the possible presence of gusuku in the Tokara Islands, which are located to the north of Amami.

From 1995 to 2000, a comprehensive investigation of gusuku was conducted in Naze (merged into the city of Amami in 2006) of northern Amami Ōshima. This project initially relied on gusuku toponyms to find archaeological remains but discovered far more remains in the mountains than expected. Among 45 sites discovered, only five had gusuku toponyms. This suggests that these sites were not gusuku in origin and that some of them were later transformed into gusuku. The toponymic survey also found that some earlier archaeological reports had labeled gusuku even though the referents were not called gusuku by locals. As a result, so-called "Uragami Gusuku", for example, was renamed to "Uragami-Arimori site."[11]

Earlier studies pointed to the similarity between gusuku in Amami, northern Okinawa Island and medieval mountain fortifications of Japan. Takanashi went further claiming that these fortifications were indeed medieval mountain fortifications. He considered the possibility that there were gaps in time among (1) the beginning of the archaeological sites, (2) the construction of defensive structures and (3) the applications of the name of gusuku. He re-evaluated Nakamatsu's sacredness theory and presented a working hypothesis that gusuku in Amami were of secondary origin, possibly related to the introduction of the noro priestess system by the Ryukyu Kingdom.[11]

List of castle/fortress-type gusuku Edit

 
Nakijin Castle in northern Okinawa
 
Furusutobaru Castle on Ishigaki Island

Amami Islands Edit

  • Amami (Akakina Castle – Ruins; Beru Castle – Ruins; Ishihara Castle - Ruins; Yononushi Castle – Ruins)

Okinawa Islands Edit

Sakishima Islands Edit

  • Hateruma (Shimotabaru Castle – Ruins)
  • Ishigaki (Furusutobaru Castle – Ruins)
  • Miyako (Kubaka Castle – Ruins; Takausu Castle – Ruins; Temaka Castle – Ruins; Ufutaki Castle – Ruins)

See also Edit

References Edit

  • Motoo, Hinago (1986). Japanese Castles. Tokyo: Kodansha. pp. 200 pages. ISBN 0-87011-766-1.
  1. ^ Sakihara Mitsugu et al (eds.) Okinawan-English Wordbook. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2006.
  2. ^ a b Kojima Yoshiyuki 小島瓔禮 (1983). Ryūkyū-gaku no shikaku 琉球学の視角 (in Japanese).
  3. ^ a b Okinawa kogo daijiten 沖縄古語大辞典, pp.241–242, 1995.
  4. ^ a b Tomoyose Eiichirō 友寄英一郎: Sai gushiku kō 再グシク考, Nantō kōko 南島考古, No. 3, pp.39–47, 1975.
  5. ^ Heinrich, Patrick; Miyara, Shinsho; Shimoji, Michinori (2015-02-17). Handbook of the Ryukyuan languages: History, structure, and use. ISBN 9781614511151. Retrieved 2021-09-19.
  6. ^ a b Nakamatsu Yashū 仲松弥秀: Sai gusuku kō 再「グスク」考, Nantō kōko 南島考古, No. 3, pp.20–25, 1975.
  7. ^ a b Nakamatsu Yashū 仲松弥秀, Kami to mura 神と村, 1990.
  8. ^ a b Yoshinari Naoki 吉成直樹, Ryūkyū no seiritsu 琉球の成立, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Asato Susumu 安里進, Gusuku, kyōdōtai, mura グスク・共同体・村, 1998.
  10. ^ a b c d e Takanashi Osamu 高梨修, Amami ni okeru gusuku kenkyū no pāsupekutivu 奄美におけるグスク研究のパースペクティヴ, Minami Nihon bunka 南日本文化, Vol. 30, pp.37–60, 1997.
  11. ^ a b c d Takanashi Osamu 高梨修, Ryūkyū-ko wo meguru rekishi ninshiki to kōkogaku kenkyū 琉球弧をめぐる歴史認識と考古学研究, Yoshinari ed., Ryūkyū-ko kasanariau rekishi ninshiki 琉球弧・重なりあう歴史認識, pp.9–54, 2007.
  12. ^ Naka Shōhachirō 名嘉正八郎 and Chinen Isamu 知念勇, Okinawa no gusuku shoki ni tsuite 沖縄のグスク初期について, Ryūkyū no rekishi to bunka 琉球の歴史と文化, pp. 229–265, 1985.
  13. ^ a b c Ono Masatoshi 小野正敏: Mitsurin ni kakusareta chūsei Yaeyama no mura 密林に隠された中世八重山の村, Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史, pp. 37–68, 1999.
  14. ^ Kerr, George. Okinawa: History of an Island People. Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1958. 116–117.
  15. ^ Pearson, Richard. Ancient Ryukyu: An Archaeological Study of Island Communities. Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 2013. Page 170–171.
  16. ^ Uezato, Takashi. 琉球戦国列伝―駆け抜けろ!古琉球の群星たち! (in Japanese). Naha, Borderink, 2012. Page 33, 84–87.
  17. ^ Nakamoto Masachie 中本正智. Zusetsu Ryūkyū-go jiten, pp. 358–359, 1981.
  18. ^ Shimoji Kazuhiro 下地和宏: Miyako no sonraku no hensen to ishimon 宮古の村落の変遷と石門, Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史, pp. 229–246, 1999.
  19. ^ a b Ōhama Eisen 大濱永亘, Yaeyama shotō no kōeki 八重山諸島の交易, Yoshinari ed., Nichiryū bōeki no reimei 日琉貿易の黎明, pp.345–382, 2008.
  20. ^ Asaoka Kōji 朝岡康二: Hateruma no mura to ido no tsunagari 波照間の村と井戸のつながり, Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史, pp. 165–186, 1999.
  21. ^ a b c Miki Yashushi 三木靖, Amami no chūsei jōkaku ni tsuite 奄美の中世城郭について, Minami Kyūshū jōkaku kenkyū 南九州城郭研究, Vol. 1, pp.67–83, 1999.

External links Edit

  • (in Japanese) List of gusuku in the Nansei Islands
  • (in Japanese) Gusuku List

gusuku, mountain, mount, グスク, okinawan, gushiku, often, refers, castles, fortresses, ryukyu, islands, that, feature, stone, walls, however, origin, essence, gusuku, remain, controversial, archaeology, okinawa, prefecture, period, refers, archaeological, epoch,. For the mountain see Mount Gusuku Gusuku グスク 城 Okinawan gushiku 1 often refers to castles or fortresses in the Ryukyu Islands that feature stone walls However the origin and essence of gusuku remain controversial In the archaeology of Okinawa Prefecture the Gusuku period refers to an archaeological epoch of the Okinawa Islands that follows the shell mound period and precedes the Sanzan period when most gusuku are thought to have been built Many gusuku and related cultural remains on Okinawa Island have been listed by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites under the title Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu Walls of Shuri Castle Contents 1 Philological analysis 2 Etymology 3 Common features 3 1 Walls 3 2 Bailey 3 3 Gates 3 4 Main Hall 3 5 Utaki 4 Research 4 1 Okinawa Islands 4 2 Sakishima Islands 4 3 Amami Islands 5 List of castle fortress type gusuku 5 1 Amami Islands 5 2 Okinawa Islands 5 3 Sakishima Islands 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPhilological analysis EditThe Yarazamori Gusuku Inscription 1554 contains phrases pile gusuku くすくつませ and pile up gusuku and くすくつみつけて apparently gusuku in these phrases refers to stone walls 2 In the Omoro Sōshi 16th 17th centuries the term gusuku is written as くすく or ぐすく in hiragana Occasionally the Chinese character 城 castle is assigned to it In later ryuka and kumi odori the reading shiro is also used for the same Chinese character citation needed The references to gusuku in the Omoro Sōshi are mostly about castles and fortresses but sacred places and places of worship are called gusuku as well In some cases gusuku simply refers to Shuri Castle 3 The Liuqiu guan yiyu a Chinese dictionary maps Chinese 皇城 imperial palace to the transcription 姑速姑 gu su gu Similarly the Yiyu yinshi assigns 窟宿孤 ku su gu to 皇城 3 Etymology EditThere is no consensus about the etymology of gusuku Chamberlain analyzed the word as the combination of gu lt honorific go 御 and shuku 宿 Kanazawa Shōzaburō also segmented gusuku into gu and suku but considered that the latter half was cognate with Old Japanese shiki in which ki was a loan from Old Korean Iha Fuyu proposed that suku was cognate with soko 塞 fortress Hirata Tsugumasa considered that suku was cognate with Japanese soko 底 bottom 4 Similarly Higashionna Kanjun raised doubts over the analysis of gu since older records always used honorific u lt o instead of gu lt go Nakahara Zenchu identified gu as go stone 4 Common features Edit nbsp Layout of Shuri CastleWalls Edit The most prominent feature of most gusuku is their wall s Gusuku walls are primarily made with Ryukyuan limestone and sometimes coral There are three types of gusuku walls aikata zumi nozura zumi and nuno zumi 5 Examples of each are Nakagusuku Castle Nakijin Castle Zakimi Castle and parts of Shuri Castle The shape of gusuku walls usually follows the contours of the land They are usually thick and sometimes have low parapets atop them Some gusuku walls like those of Nakagusuku Castle were designed to resist cannon fire Bailey Edit Gusuku have one or more baileys The baileys of typical gusuku usually contained a residence a well an utaki and storage buildings Larger gusuku like Nakijin Castle could have more than five baileys while smaller gusuku like Iha Castle had a single bailey Gates Edit Gusuku have one or more entrances often guarded by a heavy gate or gatehouse Gates were the strongpoints of gusuku Many gusuku like Nakijin Castle were adapted to have gun ports next to their gates Main Hall Edit At the heart of most gusuku was the Main Hall 正殿 Seidan The Main Hall was typically the residence of a feudal lord Aji The palace at Shuri Castle is the most prominent Main Hall being the only one remaining but the site of the Main Hall is very obvious at other gusuku such as Katsuren Castle Utaki Edit Almost all gusuku contain or are near an utaki 御嶽 shrines and sites of religious importance in the Ryukyuan religion The relationship between utaki and gusuku has led some experts to question the origin and essence of gusuku Research EditOkinawa Islands Edit Although it is widely recognized within the Okinawa Islands that gusuku are castles fortresses there is ample reason to question this perception The origin and essence of gusuku were actively discussed in the 1960s and 70s and remain controversial Cultural geographer Nakamatsu Yashu claimed that the essence of gusuku was a sacred place His theory was backed by decades of field work that was not limited to the Okinawa Islands but that extended to Amami Miyako and Yaeyama He revealed that an overwhelming majority of what were called gusuku by local communities did not look like castles or fortresses at all In fact they were too isolated from local communities too small to live in and lacked water supply Among hundreds of gusuku only a dozen were fortifications Each community usually had a gusuku Gusuku were typically located on hills but some were on sand dunes on cliff edges and in caves In some communities what were called gusuku were actually stone tombs Nakamatsu explained the great diversity of gusuku by one feature in common sacredness According to Nakamatsu a gusuku was in origin a place of aerial burial The reason that a dozen of gusuku were transformed into fortress castle like structures is unclear but he conjectured that some rulers had expanded gusuku substantially by building their family residences around them Shuri Castle for example encompasses sacred places such as Sui mui gusuku and Madan mui gusuku which suggests the original nature of the castle 6 7 Archaeologists from Okinawa Prefecture have labeled some archaeological findings as gusuku Takemoto Masahide claimed that gusuku were defensive communities He classified what he considered gusuku into three types A residence of political leaders a fortress castle with stone walls B defensive community and C place of ancestor worship or burial place According to Takemoto Type B which is overwhelming in number appeared during the transitional period between primitive society and class society 8 As noted by Asato Susumu there is a significant gap in the use of the term gusuku While Nakamatsu referred to limited space as gusuku Takamoto applied the term to the whole archaeological site 9 Archaeologist Tōma Shiichi hypothesized that a gusuku was the residence of an aji local ruler or warlord and his family Since most gusuku in the Okinawa Islands are accompanied with stone walls he considered that the Gusuku Period was characterized by the formation of class society Among archaeologists however Kokubu Naoichi supported Nakamatsu s theory considering poor living conditions of gusuku 8 Asato Susumu expressed concern about the association of gusuku with class society because the emergence of political rulers was not well attested by archaeological findings but mostly based on literature that was written centuries later 9 Folklorist Kojima Yoshiyuki was also a supporter of the sacredness theory However he opposed to Nakamatsu s theory about the origin of gusuku as a burial place He argued that the word gusuku originally meant stonework Separately of this local communities handed down mountain cult which shared roots with that of Yakushima and by extension Japan Some sacred mountains were later fortified with stone walls and as a result gusuku came to mean castles fortresses 2 In any case a flood of archaeological discoveries in the 1970s led Okinawan archaeologists to establish archaeological periods of the Okinawa Islands that were distinct from those of Japan Amami and the Sakishima group also have unique archaeological periods distinct from Japan and one another In their framework the Gusuku period is an archaeological epoch of the Okinawa Islands which they consider was characterized by the widespread appearance of gusuku the widespread use of iron and farming It follows the Shell Mound period and precedes the Sanzan period It is parallel with the late Heian to Muromachi periods of Japan Also the beginning of the Gusuku period corresponds to that of the Old Ryukyu period of Okinawan historiography both beginning in 1187 with the semi legendary ascension of King Shunten Takanashi Osamu an Amami based archaeologist criticized the trend of Okinawan archaeology The Gusuku period lacked clear markers of dating from an archaeological perspective Pottery seriation in particular remained poorly understood The contemporaneousness of stone walls and excavated potteries was not established He also noted a bias of Okinawan archaeologists who he thought were preoccupied with questions of how the Okinawa centered kingdom of Ryukyu was formed 10 11 While typical castle fortress type gusuku in the Okinawa Islands were featured by stone walls it was discovered in the 1980s and 90s that some fortifications in northern Okinawa Island lacked stone walls but instead were characterized by earthworks kuruwa and dry moats This style of fortifications is in fact rather common in Amami Ōshima and representative of medieval mountain fortifications 中世山城 of Japan Naka Shōhachirō and Chinen Isamu a historian and an archaeologist from Okinawa dated them to the late 12th to early 13th centuries and claimed that they were predecessors of gusuku with stone walls 12 This view was actively criticized by Takanashi Osamu in the late 1990s and 2000s 10 11 Sakishima Islands Edit Archaeological studies in the Sakishima Islands in southern Okinawa Prefecture are not so active as those in the main Okinawa Islands Some Okinawa led archaeological reports labeled some sites in Miyako and Yaeyama as gusuku like Archaeologist Ono Masatoshi raised concern about the naive application of the Okinawan gusuku as fortifications framework and urged that scholars should not turn a blind eye to the diversified nature of archaeological sites with stone walls in these islands 13 Few gusuku sites can be attributed to the fact that the Sakishima Islands were over a hundred years behind Okinawa socially and technologically 14 In 1500 Ryukyu invaded and annexed the islands which would have limited further local gusuku development The primary gusuku site in Yaeyama is Furusutobaru Castle residence of Oyake Akahachi which was attacked by Nakasone Toyomiya of Miyako shortly before the invasion by Ryukyu 15 16 Linguist Nakamoto Masachie noted that in some dialects of Yaeyama gusuku gushiku means stone walls themselves not a structure with stone walls and conjectured that this might be the original meaning of gusuku 17 According to Ono Masatoshi gusuku has various meanings depending on dialects of Yaeyama including a partition of a mansion and stone walls surrounding an agricultural field 13 Nakamatsu Yashu claimed that suku like word forms were more prominent in Miyako and Yaeyama than gusuku 7 Regardless of whether it is appropriate to call them gusuku the Yaeyama Islands have archaeological remains with stone walls such as Mashuku Village of Hateruma Island Hanasuku and Gumaara Villages and Shinzato Villages of Taketomi Island These villages were abandoned around the time of the conquest by the Ryukyu Kingdom What are common to these villages are that they were located on top of cliffs divided by inhomogeneous cell blocks and lacked roads The whole village and each cell block were surrounded by stone walls 13 This type of abandoned settlement can also be found on Miyako Island but they are rather exceptional 18 The local people call these remains busu nu yashiki bushi s mansion busu nu yaa ishigaki bushi s house s stone walls or busu nu yaa bushi s house busu nu yama bushi s mountain in Ishigaki bushin yaa bushi s house in Hatoma nishi nu bushi nu yaa bushi s house in the north in Aragusuku 19 better source needed In the archaeology of Yaeyama human settlements prior to the conquest by Ryukyu are called Suku Villages because the names of these ruins have the suffix suku 20 By extension the archaeological epoch of the Suku Culture 11 16th centuries is sometimes used by archaeologists 19 Amami Islands Edit Formal studies of gusuku in the Amami Islands group in southern Kagoshima Prefecture were started by Nakamatsu Yashu in the 1960s and 70s He revealed that most of what were called gusuku by local communities of Amami were by no means fortifications He also noted that Amami had suku toponyms which were otherwise considered specific to Miyako and Yaeyama 6 However his study on Amami went largely unnoticed 10 In the 1980s and 90s Miki Yasushi an expert of medieval mountain fortifications of Japan extended his research to the Amami Islands largely independently of Okinawan archaeology 21 His comprehensive study found 129 gusuku toponyms in Amami Ōshima Similarly a 1982 research project by Kagoshima Prefecture covered 45 fortifications in Amami 10 Miki carefully noted that as Nakamatsu had shown most of what were called gusuku were not fortifications and that conversely some fortifications were not called gusuku by the locals A major difference from those in the Okinawa Islands was that gusuku in Amami except those in Okinoerabu and Yoron nearly completely lacked stone walls As a historian from Japan Miki took much notice of the religious nature of gusuku in Amami which is completely absent from Japanese fortresses 21 Publications from Amami gained attention of some Okinawan archaeologists in the 1980s and 90s and they attempted to place Amami s gusuku in the Okinawan gusuku as fortifications framework citation needed Naka Shōhachiro investigated some gusuku in Amami Ōshima and discovered kuruwa and dry moats there He claimed that the primary function of those gusuku was defensiveness not religiousness as Nakamatsu claimed He dated them to the late 12th to early 13th centuries and considered that they subsequently evolved into those with stone walls in Okinawa 10 By contrast Miki conjectured that the construction of these fortifications was triggered by repeated invasion by the Ryukyu Kingdom in the 15th and 16th centuries 21 In his survey of earlier studies Takanashi Osamu criticized Naka s theory because his dating lacked evidence In fact gusuku with established dates were mostly from the 14th to 16th centuries While other archaeologists had focused on mountain fortifications he paid attention to gusuku in flat land He also indicated the possible presence of gusuku in the Tokara Islands which are located to the north of Amami From 1995 to 2000 a comprehensive investigation of gusuku was conducted in Naze merged into the city of Amami in 2006 of northern Amami Ōshima This project initially relied on gusuku toponyms to find archaeological remains but discovered far more remains in the mountains than expected Among 45 sites discovered only five had gusuku toponyms This suggests that these sites were not gusuku in origin and that some of them were later transformed into gusuku The toponymic survey also found that some earlier archaeological reports had labeled gusuku even though the referents were not called gusuku by locals As a result so called Uragami Gusuku for example was renamed to Uragami Arimori site 11 Earlier studies pointed to the similarity between gusuku in Amami northern Okinawa Island and medieval mountain fortifications of Japan Takanashi went further claiming that these fortifications were indeed medieval mountain fortifications He considered the possibility that there were gaps in time among 1 the beginning of the archaeological sites 2 the construction of defensive structures and 3 the applications of the name of gusuku He re evaluated Nakamatsu s sacredness theory and presented a working hypothesis that gusuku in Amami were of secondary origin possibly related to the introduction of the noro priestess system by the Ryukyu Kingdom 11 List of castle fortress type gusuku Edit nbsp Nakijin Castle in northern Okinawa nbsp Furusutobaru Castle on Ishigaki IslandAmami Islands Edit Amami Akakina Castle Ruins Beru Castle Ruins Ishihara Castle Ruins Yononushi Castle Ruins Okinawa Islands Edit Ikei Ikei Castle Ruins Izena Izena Castle Ruins Kume Chinaha Castle Ruins Gushikawa Castle Kume Ruins Suhara Castle Ruins Tunnaha Castle Ruins Uegusuku Castle Kume Ruins Okinawa Agena Castle Ruins Chibana Castle Ruins Chinen Castle Ruins Gushikawa Castle Itoman Ruins Iha Castle Ruins Iso Castle Ruins Itokazu Castle Ruins Kakinohana Castle Ruins Katsuren Castle Partially reconstructed Kin Castle Demolished Komesu Castle Ruins Kyan Castle Ruins Mie Castle Ruins Nago Castle Ruins Nakagusuku Castle Partially reconstructed Nakijin Castle Ruins Nanzan Castle Ruins Ōzato Castle Ruins Sashiki Castle Ruins Shuri Castle Mostly reconstructed Tamagusuku Castle Ruins Tomigusuku Castle Ruins Uegusuku Castle Tomigusuku Ruins Urasoe Castle Partially reconstructed Yamada Castle Ruins Yarazamori Castle Demolished Zakimi Castle Partially reconstructed Sakishima Islands Edit Hateruma Shimotabaru Castle Ruins Ishigaki Furusutobaru Castle Ruins Miyako Kubaka Castle Ruins Takausu Castle Ruins Temaka Castle Ruins Ufutaki Castle Ruins See also EditGusuku period ja Mount Gusuku Historic Sites of Okinawa Japanese castle Chashi Architecture of JapanReferences EditMotoo Hinago 1986 Japanese Castles Tokyo Kodansha pp 200 pages ISBN 0 87011 766 1 Sakihara Mitsugu et al eds Okinawan English Wordbook Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2006 a b Kojima Yoshiyuki 小島瓔禮 1983 Ryukyu gaku no shikaku琉球学の視角 in Japanese a b Okinawa kogo daijiten 沖縄古語大辞典 pp 241 242 1995 a b Tomoyose Eiichirō 友寄英一郎 Sai gushiku kō 再グシク考 Nantō kōko 南島考古 No 3 pp 39 47 1975 Heinrich Patrick Miyara Shinsho Shimoji Michinori 2015 02 17 Handbook of the Ryukyuan languages History structure and use ISBN 9781614511151 Retrieved 2021 09 19 a b Nakamatsu Yashu 仲松弥秀 Sai gusuku kō 再 グスク 考 Nantō kōko 南島考古 No 3 pp 20 25 1975 a b Nakamatsu Yashu 仲松弥秀 Kami to mura 神と村 1990 a b Yoshinari Naoki 吉成直樹 Ryukyu no seiritsu 琉球の成立 2011 a b Asato Susumu 安里進 Gusuku kyōdōtai mura グスク 共同体 村 1998 a b c d e Takanashi Osamu 高梨修 Amami ni okeru gusuku kenkyu no pasupekutivu 奄美におけるグスク研究のパースペクティヴ Minami Nihon bunka 南日本文化 Vol 30 pp 37 60 1997 a b c d Takanashi Osamu 高梨修 Ryukyu ko wo meguru rekishi ninshiki to kōkogaku kenkyu 琉球弧をめぐる歴史認識と考古学研究 Yoshinari ed Ryukyu ko kasanariau rekishi ninshiki 琉球弧 重なりあう歴史認識 pp 9 54 2007 Naka Shōhachirō 名嘉正八郎 and Chinen Isamu 知念勇 Okinawa no gusuku shoki ni tsuite 沖縄のグスク初期について Ryukyu no rekishi to bunka 琉球の歴史と文化 pp 229 265 1985 a b c Ono Masatoshi 小野正敏 Mitsurin ni kakusareta chusei Yaeyama no mura 密林に隠された中世八重山の村 Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史 pp 37 68 1999 Kerr George Okinawa History of an Island People Tokyo Charles E Tuttle Company 1958 116 117 Pearson Richard Ancient Ryukyu An Archaeological Study of Island Communities Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 2013 Page 170 171 Uezato Takashi 琉球戦国列伝 駆け抜けろ 古琉球の群星たち in Japanese Naha Borderink 2012 Page 33 84 87 Nakamoto Masachie 中本正智 Zusetsu Ryukyu go jiten pp 358 359 1981 Shimoji Kazuhiro 下地和宏 Miyako no sonraku no hensen to ishimon 宮古の村落の変遷と石門 Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史 pp 229 246 1999 a b Ōhama Eisen 大濱永亘 Yaeyama shotō no kōeki 八重山諸島の交易 Yoshinari ed Nichiryu bōeki no reimei 日琉貿易の黎明 pp 345 382 2008 Asaoka Kōji 朝岡康二 Hateruma no mura to ido no tsunagari 波照間の村と井戸のつながり Mura ga kataru Okinawa no rekishi 村が語る沖縄の歴史 pp 165 186 1999 a b c Miki Yashushi 三木靖 Amami no chusei jōkaku ni tsuite 奄美の中世城郭について Minami Kyushu jōkaku kenkyu 南九州城郭研究 Vol 1 pp 67 83 1999 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gusuku nbsp Look up gusuku in Wiktionary the free dictionary in Japanese List of gusuku in the Nansei Islands in Japanese Gusuku List Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gusuku amp oldid 1174134102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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