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King of Ryukyu

King of Ryūkyū[1][2] (琉球国王[3][4][5][6], Ryūkyū koku-ō), also known as King of Lew Chew,[7] King of Chūzan (中山王[8][9], Chūzan-ō), or more officially Ryūkyū Kingdom's King of Chūzan (琉球国中山王[8], Ryūkyū-koku Chūzan-ō), was a title held by several lineages from Okinawa Island until 1879. It effectively started in 1372 when Satto greeted a Chinese envoy from the newly established Ming dynasty although his son Bunei was the first to be officially recognized as the King of Chūzan. However, the official Okinawan narrative traces the line of succession further back to the legendary ruler Shunten, who supposedly ascended to the throne in 1187. Another peculiar feature of the official Okinawan narrative is the notion of the single line of succession, instead of Chinese-style dynastic changes, even though they clearly recognized that several unrelated lineages had taken over the position.

King of Ryūkyū
琉球国王
Royal Crest
Crown of the King of Ryūkyū
Details
StyleYour Majesty (主上, 王上, 聖上)
Ushū (御主)
Miomae-ganashi (美御前加那志, used by royal family)
Shūri-ten-ganashi (首里天加那志, used in Okinawa Island)
Uchinaa-ganashi (沖縄加那志, used in outlying islands)
First monarchShunten (traditional narrative)
Last monarchShō Tai
Formation1187 (traditional date)
AbolitionMarch 17, 1879
ResidenceShuri Castle
Pretender(s)Mamoru Shō

Early forms of the narrative edit

The earliest known form of the narrative dates to the reign of King Shō Shin of the Second Shō dynasty. A stone monument dated 1522 makes reference to "three dynasties of Shunten's, Eiso's and Satto's". His son King Shō Sei expressed the line of succession in a slightly more elaborate form. The Katanohana Inscription (1543) reads: "Shō Sei, King of Chūzan of the Great State of Ryūkyū, ascended to the throne as the 21st king since Sonton [Shunten]" (大りうきう国中山王尚清ハ、そんとんよりこのかた二十一代の御くらひをつきめしよわちへ). Similarly, another stone monument dated 1597 states that Shō Nei is the 24th king since Sonton [Shunten] (しやうねいハそんとんよりこのかた二十四たいのわうの御くらゐ...). The numbers of kings mentioned in these monuments agree with those of the official history books compiled much later although it is not clear whether the individual members were fixed at this stage.[10]

Historian Dana Masayuki relates the notion of the line of succession to Buddhist temples where ancestral tablets of the deceased kings were stored. According to the Chūzan Seifu, Manju-ji stored the ancestral tablets of Satto, Bunei, Shishō and Shō Hashi, while the tablets of Shō Taikyū and Shō Toku were at Tenkai-ji. Shō En, the founder of the Second Shō dynasty, established Tennō-ji and designated it as the family mausoleum. It is not certain which temples were dedicated to the missing kings of the First Shō dynasty, Shō Chū, Shō Shitatsu, and Shō Kinpuku. Nevertheless, each king performed "ancestral" worship for deceased kings from different dynasties in the presence of a Chinese envoy, presumably because they deceived the Chinese into thinking that the throne was normally succeeded from the father to the son.[11]

According to the Ryūkyū-koku yuraiki (1713), Ryūfuku-ji in Urasoe, in addition to the above-mentioned temples, served as the royal mausoleum. This temple stored inkstone tablets representing the deceased kings from Shunten to Shō Hashi. According to the Chūzan Seifu, Ryūfuku-ji was originally founded by Eiso under the name of Gokuraku-ji and was re-established by Shō En. Dana Masayuki surmises that Gokuraku-ji used to serve not only as the family mausoleum of the Eiso dynasty but as the state mausoleum tracing the royal line back to Shunten. The apparent conflict between Manju-ji and Gokuraku-ji is resolved if Manju-ji is seen as a representation of the state in relation to China while Gokuraku-ji was the manifestation of Okinawa's own narrative.[11]

Shō Shin established Enkaku-ji and transferred the function of the family mausoleum from Tennō-ji to Enkaku-ji. Shō Shin founded another temple named Sōgen-ji and decided to use it as the state mausoleum while the function of Enkaku-ji was clarified as the mausoleum of the Second Shō dynasty. He moved all ancestral tablets, starting from Shunten, to Sōgen-ji and thereby visualized the single line of succession based on Okinawa's own narrative.[11]

Minamoto no Tametomo as the father of Shunten edit

Minamoto no Tametomo (1139–1170), the uncle of the Kamakura shogunate's founder Minamoto no Yoritomo, has been consistently treated as the father of Shunten since the earliest official history book, the Chūzan Seikan (1650). The earliest known association of Tametomo with Ryūkyū can be found in a letter written by a Zen monk in Kyoto named Gesshū Jukei (1470–1533) with a request by Kakuō Chisen, another Zen monk serving to Ryūkyū's Tennō-ji. According to a tale which Gesshū attributed to Kakuō, Tametomo moved to Ryūkyū, used demons as servants, and became the founder of the state, which the Minamoto clan had ruled since then. The reference to demons may reflect the centuries-old Japanese Buddhist perception of Ryūkyū as the land of man-eating demons, as seen in, for example, the Hyōtō Ryūkyū-koku ki (1244). Although at this stage, Tametomo was not explicitly associated with Shunten, the tale apparently circulated in the network of Zen Buddhists connecting Kyoto to Okinawa. A similar tale was recorded in the Ryūkyū Shintō-ki (1606) by Jōdo-shū monk Taichū, who visited Ryūkyū from 1603 to 1606. This indicates that by that time, the tale of Tametomo had been known to non-Zen Buddhists. In light of these, the apparent innovation of the Chūzan Seikan (1650) was the explicit association of Tametomo with Shunten.[12]

The tale of Tametomo had a profound impact on Ryūkyū's self-perception. In 1691, for example, the king ordered all the male members of the royal family to use the kanji Chō (朝) as the first of their two-character given names, presumably to indicate an affinity to Minamoto no Tametomo (源為).[12]

Association of the foundation myth with the royal line edit

Another innovation of the Chūzan Seikan (1650) was the association of the foundation myth with the royal line. The foundation myth concerning the goddess Amamikyu itself was recorded in the Ryūkyū Shintō-ki (1606). However, the Chūzan Seikan was the first to make reference to the Tenson-shi (天孫氏), who supposedly descended from the goddess.[11]

Without showing a clear genealogy, the official history books connect the Tenson dynasty remotely to the Eiso dynasty. Eiso's mother dreamed that the sun intruded into her bosom, giving a miraculous birth to Eiso, but Eiso's foster father was said to have descended from the Tenson dynasty. Similarly, Satto was said to have been mothered by a swan maiden. Shō En was believed to have descended from Gihon of the Shunten dynasty (i.e., the second Shō family originated from the Minamoto clan), or some other king. It is not clear why the Chūzan Seikan did not provide a special link to the First Shō dynasty.[11]

Official narrative edit

Tenson dynasty edit

The founder of the Tenson dynasty[13] was a descendant of Amamikyu (阿摩美久, the goddess of creation). The 25 generations of the Tenson dynasty ruled the land for 17,802 years, but their names are unknown.

Shunten dynasty edit

The Shunten dynasty lasted from AD 1187 to AD 1259.[14] In 1186, the 25th ruler's throne was usurped by Riyū. Minamoto no Tametomo's son Shunten overthrew Riyū the next year, becoming the king.

Name Kanji Divine name[15] Reign Age at death
Shunten 舜天 Sonton
尊敦
1187–1237 71
Shunbajunki 舜馬順煕 Sonomasu 其益
or
Sonomasumi 其益美
1238–1248 63
Gihon 義本 Unknown 1249–1259 ?

Eiso dynasty edit

The Eiso dynasty lasted from AD 1260 to AD 1349.[13] In 1259, Gihon, who was the last king of the Shunten dynasty, abdicated his throne. Fathered by the sun, Eiso succeeded him. During the reign of Tamagusuku, the state was divided into three polities. The King of Nanzan (Sannan) and the King of Hokuzan (Sanhoku) came to compete with the King of Chūzan.

Name Kanji Divine name[15] Reign Age at death
Eiso 英祖 Wezo-no-tedako
英祖日子
1260–1299 70
Taisei 大成 Unknown 1300–1308 9 or 61
Eiji 英慈 Unknown 1309–1313 45
Tamagusuku 玉城 Unknown 1314–1336 40
Seii 西威 Unknown 1337–1354 21

Satto dynasty edit

The Satto dynasty lasted from AD 1350 to AD 1405.[13] Satto, the son of a peasant and a swan maiden, replaced Seii as the King of Chūzan. Satto started a tributary relation to the Ming emperor.

Name Kanji Divine name[15] Reign Age at death
Satto 察度 Oho-mamono
大真物
1355–1397 74
Bunei 武寧 Naga-no-mamono
中之真物
1398–1406 50

First Shō dynasty edit

The First Shō dynasty lasted from AD 1429 to AD 1469.[16] Shō Hashi, the virtual founder of the First Shō dynasty, overthrew Bunei in 1406. He installed his father, Shō Shishō, as the nominal King of Chūzan. Shō Hashi annihilated the King of Hokuzan (Sanhoku) in 1416. In 1421, after the death of his father, Shō Hashi became the King of Chūzan. He overthrew the King of Nanzan (Sannan) until 1429, unifying the island. The surname Shō (尚) was given by the Ming emperor.[17]

Name Kanji Divine name[15] Reign Age at death
Shō Shishō 尚思紹 Kimishi-mamono
君志真物
1407–1421 67
Shō Hashi 尚巴志 Sejitaka-mamono
勢治高真物
1422–1439 67
Shō Chū 尚忠 Unknown 1440–1442 54
Shō Shitatsu 尚思達 Kimiteda
君日
1443–1449 41
Shō Kinpuku 尚金福 Kimishi
君志
1450–1453 55
Shō Taikyū 尚泰久 Nanojiyomoi 那之志与茂伊
also called
Oho-yononushi 大世主
1454–1460 45
Shō Toku 尚徳 Hachiman-no-aji 八幡之按司
also called
Setaka-ō 世高王
1461–1469 29

Second Shō dynasty edit

The Second Shō dynasty lasted from AD 1470 to AD 1879.[16] When Shō Toku, the last king of the First Shō dynasty, died in 1469, courtiers launched a coup d'état and elected Shō En as king. He became the founder of the Second Shō dynasty. The kingdom was at its peak during the reign of his son, Shō Shin. In 1609, Satsuma Domain conquered the Ryukyu Kingdom. From then on, Ryūkyū was a vassal state of Satsuma Domain while the king was ordered to keep its tributary relation with China. The kingdom became a domain of Japan in 1872. In 1879, Japan replaced Ryukyu Domain with Okinawa Prefecture, formally annexing the islands. King Shō Tai was dethroned and later given the title of marquis.

Name Kanji Divine name[15] Warabi-naa Nanui Reign Age at death
Shō En 尚円 Kanamaru-aji-sohesuwetsugiwaunise
金丸按司添末続王仁子
Umitukugani
思徳金
1470–1476 61
Shō Sen'i 尚宣威 Nishi no yononushi
西之世主
? 1477 48
Shō Shin 尚真 Ogiyakamowi
於義也嘉茂慧
Makatotarugani
真加戸樽金
1477–1526 61
Shō Sei 尚清 Tenitsugi-no-ajisohe
天続之按司添
Manikiyotarugani
真仁堯樽金
1527–1555 59
Shō Gen 尚元 Tedahajime-ajisohe
日始按司添
Kanichiyo
金千代
1556–1572 44
Shō Ei 尚永 Wezoniyasuhe-ajisohe 英祖仁耶添按司添
also called
Tedahokori-ō 日豊操王
or Tedayomutori-ō 日豊操王
? 1573–1586 30
Shō Nei 尚寧 Tedagasuhe-ajisohe
日賀末按司添
Umitukugani
思徳金
1587–1620 56
Shō Hō 尚豊 Tenigiyasuhe-ajisohe
天喜也末按司添
Umigurugani
思五郎金
Chōshō
朝昌
1621–1640 50
Shō Ken 尚賢 Umimatsugani
思松金
? 1641–1647 23
Shō Shitsu 尚質 Umitukugani
思徳金
? 1648–1668 39
Shō Tei 尚貞 Umigurugani
思五郎金
Chōshū
朝周
1669–1709 64
Shō Eki 尚益 Umigurugani
思五郎金
? 1710–1712 34
Shō Kei 尚敬 Umitukugani
思徳金
Chōshi
朝糸
1713–1751 52
Shō Boku 尚穆 Umigurugani
思五郎金
Chōkō
朝康
1752–1795 55
Shō On 尚温 Umigurugani
思五郎金
Chōkoku
朝克
1796–1802 18
Shō Sei 尚成 Umitukugani
思徳金
1803 3
Shō Kō 尚灝 Umijirugani
思次良金
Chōshō
朝相
1804–1828 47
Shō Iku 尚育 Umitukugani
思徳金
Chōken
朝現
1829–1847 34
Shō Tai 尚泰 Umijirugani
思次良金
Chōken
朝憲
1848–1879 58

Honored as king posthumously edit

Name Kanji Warabi-naa Nanui Father of Notes
Shō Shoku 尚稷 ? Shō En, Shō Sen'i posthumously honored as king in 1699
stripped in 1719
Shō I 尚懿 Umitarugani
思太郎金
Chōken
朝賢
Shō Nei posthumously honored as king in 1699
stripped in 1719
Shō Kyū 尚久 Masanrugani
真三郎金
Chōkō
朝公
Shō Hō posthumously honored as king in 1699
stripped in 1719
Shō Jun 尚純 Umitukugani
思徳金
? Shō Eki Crown Prince before being able to succeed to the throne
Shō Tetsu 尚哲 Umitukugani
思徳金
? Shō On, Shō Kō Crown Prince before being able to succeed to the throne

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica. Vol. 4. Encyclopaedia Britannica, inc. p. 363. ISBN 9780852294000. In 1872 the Meiji government conferred on the last king of Ryukyu, Sho Tai, the title of vassal king, and in the following year took over the island's foreign affairs.
  2. ^ Japan in the Muromachi Age. East Asia Program, Cornell University. 2001. p. 173. ISBN 9781885445094. In 1508 Shimazu sent a letter to the king of Ryukyu
  3. ^ 中山世鑑 琉球國中山王世繼總論 (in Chinese). 尚巴志及父 尚思紹係追封且賜之以冠服綵幣等物 琉球國王尚姓此始
  4. ^ 中山世譜 巻九 (in Chinese). 琉球國王。遣毛文和等。賚捧表文方物。
  5. ^ 清實錄 聖祖仁皇帝實錄 卷之一百四 (in Chinese). 琉球國王。御書中山世土四大字
  6. ^ 通航一覧 巻之五 (in Japanese). 正保元年七月三日、琉球国王之使者上下七十人なり、社参として当地発足、赴日光山云々、松平薩摩守所令同道也
  7. ^ United States Congressional Serial Set. Vol. 1672. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1876. p. 313. The latter country claims sovereignty over the islands, and the so-called King of Lew Chew is said to be now in Japan, the guest of the Mikado, whose superior authority, I am told, he recognizes.
  8. ^ a b 清實錄 世祖章皇帝實錄 卷之八十五 (in Chinese). 齎敕印。封琉球國中山王世子尚質。為中山王
  9. ^ 通航一覧 巻之三 (in Japanese). 慶長十五年五月十六日、家久中山王を率ゐて鹿児島を発し、八月六日駿府に参着す
  10. ^ Ikemiya Masaharu 池宮正治 (2015). "Ryūkyū no rekishi jojutsu: "Chūzan Seikan" kara "Kyūyō" e" 琉球の歴史叙述: 『中山世鑑』から『球陽』へ. Ryūkyū-shi bunka ron 琉球史文化論 (in Japanese). Kasama Shoin 笠間書院. pp. 3–21.
  11. ^ a b c d e Dana Masayuki 田名真之 (2008). "Ryūkyū ōken no keifu ishiki to Minamoto no Tametomo torai denshō" 琉球王権の系譜意識と源為朝渡来伝承 [Ryuyuan Royal Succession Ideology and The Minamoto Temetomo Legend]. In Kyūshū shigaku kenkyūkai 九州史学研究会 (ed.). Kyōkai no aidentiti 境界のアイデンティティ (in Japanese). Iwata Shoin 岩田書院. pp. 181–196.
  12. ^ a b Ikemyia Masaharu 池宮正治 (2015). "Rekishi to setsuwa no aida: Katarareru rekishi" 歴史と説話の間: 語られる歴史. Ryūkyū-shi bunka ron 琉球史文化論 (in Japanese). Kasama Shoin 笠間書院. pp. 23–52.
  13. ^ a b c Richard Pearson (2013). Ancient Ryukyu: An Archaeological Study of Island Communities. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 9780824865894. The victorious Ryukyu Kingdom compiled the Chūzan seikan as its history in the seventeenth century AD, outlining a succession of three early dynasties (Haneji 1983). These were the Tenson dynasty, the Eiso dynasty (AD 1260 to 1349), and the Satto dynasty (AD 1350 to 1405).
  14. ^ Ryukyu Islands (United States Civil Administration, 1950–1972). Shōgai Hōdōkyoku 琉球列島米国民政府涉外報道局 (1970). "守礼の光". 守礼の光 (2–12). In reviewing history, it can be noted that there was political turmoil in the Ryukyus in the 1250s during the reign of King Gihon, the last king of the Shunten dynasty. In the 1350s the Eiso dynasty was overturned and Urasoe Anji Satto became the new King of the Ryukyus{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ a b c d e (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-10-06. Retrieved 2019-11-24.
  16. ^ a b Richard Pearson (2009). "Okinawa: The Rise of an Island Kingdom : Archaeological and Cultural Perspectives : Proceedings of a Symposium, Kingdom of the Coral Seas, November 17, 2007, at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London". Archaeopress. In an alternate scheme, the First Sho dynasty ( 1429–1469 ) was established by Sho Hashi in 1429 and the Second Sho dynasty ( 1470 - 1879 ) was established by Sho En in 1470 (ed. ) {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ Kerr, George. Okinawa: The History of an Island People. Tokyo: Tuttle, 2000. p. 89.

Sources edit

  • Kerr, George H. (1965). Okinawa, the History of an Island People. Rutland, Vermont: C.E. Tuttle Co. OCLC 39242121

External links edit

king, ryukyu, king, ryūkyū, 琉球国王, ryūkyū, koku, also, known, king, chew, king, chūzan, 中山王, chūzan, more, officially, ryūkyū, kingdom, king, chūzan, 琉球国中山王, ryūkyū, koku, chūzan, title, held, several, lineages, from, okinawa, island, until, 1879, effectively, . King of Ryukyu 1 2 琉球国王 3 4 5 6 Ryukyu koku ō also known as King of Lew Chew 7 King of Chuzan 中山王 8 9 Chuzan ō or more officially Ryukyu Kingdom s King of Chuzan 琉球国中山王 8 Ryukyu koku Chuzan ō was a title held by several lineages from Okinawa Island until 1879 It effectively started in 1372 when Satto greeted a Chinese envoy from the newly established Ming dynasty although his son Bunei was the first to be officially recognized as the King of Chuzan However the official Okinawan narrative traces the line of succession further back to the legendary ruler Shunten who supposedly ascended to the throne in 1187 Another peculiar feature of the official Okinawan narrative is the notion of the single line of succession instead of Chinese style dynastic changes even though they clearly recognized that several unrelated lineages had taken over the position King of Ryukyu琉球国王Royal CrestCrown of the King of RyukyuDetailsStyleYour Majesty 主上 王上 聖上 Ushu 御主 Miomae ganashi 美御前加那志 used by royal family Shuri ten ganashi 首里天加那志 used in Okinawa Island Uchinaa ganashi 沖縄加那志 used in outlying islands First monarchShunten traditional narrative Last monarchShō TaiFormation1187 traditional date AbolitionMarch 17 1879ResidenceShuri CastlePretender s Mamoru Shō Contents 1 Early forms of the narrative 2 Minamoto no Tametomo as the father of Shunten 3 Association of the foundation myth with the royal line 4 Official narrative 4 1 Tenson dynasty 4 2 Shunten dynasty 4 3 Eiso dynasty 4 4 Satto dynasty 4 5 First Shō dynasty 4 6 Second Shō dynasty 4 6 1 Honored as king posthumously 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 External linksEarly forms of the narrative editThe earliest known form of the narrative dates to the reign of King Shō Shin of the Second Shō dynasty A stone monument dated 1522 makes reference to three dynasties of Shunten s Eiso s and Satto s His son King Shō Sei expressed the line of succession in a slightly more elaborate form The Katanohana Inscription 1543 reads Shō Sei King of Chuzan of the Great State of Ryukyu ascended to the throne as the 21st king since Sonton Shunten 大りうきう国中山王尚清ハ そんとんよりこのかた二十一代の御くらひをつきめしよわちへ Similarly another stone monument dated 1597 states that Shō Nei is the 24th king since Sonton Shunten しやうねいハそんとんよりこのかた二十四たいのわうの御くらゐ The numbers of kings mentioned in these monuments agree with those of the official history books compiled much later although it is not clear whether the individual members were fixed at this stage 10 Historian Dana Masayuki relates the notion of the line of succession to Buddhist temples where ancestral tablets of the deceased kings were stored According to the Chuzan Seifu Manju ji stored the ancestral tablets of Satto Bunei Shishō and Shō Hashi while the tablets of Shō Taikyu and Shō Toku were at Tenkai ji Shō En the founder of the Second Shō dynasty established Tennō ji and designated it as the family mausoleum It is not certain which temples were dedicated to the missing kings of the First Shō dynasty Shō Chu Shō Shitatsu and Shō Kinpuku Nevertheless each king performed ancestral worship for deceased kings from different dynasties in the presence of a Chinese envoy presumably because they deceived the Chinese into thinking that the throne was normally succeeded from the father to the son 11 According to the Ryukyu koku yuraiki 1713 Ryufuku ji in Urasoe in addition to the above mentioned temples served as the royal mausoleum This temple stored inkstone tablets representing the deceased kings from Shunten to Shō Hashi According to the Chuzan Seifu Ryufuku ji was originally founded by Eiso under the name of Gokuraku ji and was re established by Shō En Dana Masayuki surmises that Gokuraku ji used to serve not only as the family mausoleum of the Eiso dynasty but as the state mausoleum tracing the royal line back to Shunten The apparent conflict between Manju ji and Gokuraku ji is resolved if Manju ji is seen as a representation of the state in relation to China while Gokuraku ji was the manifestation of Okinawa s own narrative 11 Shō Shin established Enkaku ji and transferred the function of the family mausoleum from Tennō ji to Enkaku ji Shō Shin founded another temple named Sōgen ji and decided to use it as the state mausoleum while the function of Enkaku ji was clarified as the mausoleum of the Second Shō dynasty He moved all ancestral tablets starting from Shunten to Sōgen ji and thereby visualized the single line of succession based on Okinawa s own narrative 11 Minamoto no Tametomo as the father of Shunten editMinamoto no Tametomo 1139 1170 the uncle of the Kamakura shogunate s founder Minamoto no Yoritomo has been consistently treated as the father of Shunten since the earliest official history book the Chuzan Seikan 1650 The earliest known association of Tametomo with Ryukyu can be found in a letter written by a Zen monk in Kyoto named Gesshu Jukei 1470 1533 with a request by Kakuō Chisen another Zen monk serving to Ryukyu s Tennō ji According to a tale which Gesshu attributed to Kakuō Tametomo moved to Ryukyu used demons as servants and became the founder of the state which the Minamoto clan had ruled since then The reference to demons may reflect the centuries old Japanese Buddhist perception of Ryukyu as the land of man eating demons as seen in for example the Hyōtō Ryukyu koku ki 1244 Although at this stage Tametomo was not explicitly associated with Shunten the tale apparently circulated in the network of Zen Buddhists connecting Kyoto to Okinawa A similar tale was recorded in the Ryukyu Shintō ki 1606 by Jōdo shu monk Taichu who visited Ryukyu from 1603 to 1606 This indicates that by that time the tale of Tametomo had been known to non Zen Buddhists In light of these the apparent innovation of the Chuzan Seikan 1650 was the explicit association of Tametomo with Shunten 12 The tale of Tametomo had a profound impact on Ryukyu s self perception In 1691 for example the king ordered all the male members of the royal family to use the kanji Chō 朝 as the first of their two character given names presumably to indicate an affinity to Minamoto no Tametomo 源為朝 12 Association of the foundation myth with the royal line editAnother innovation of the Chuzan Seikan 1650 was the association of the foundation myth with the royal line The foundation myth concerning the goddess Amamikyu itself was recorded in the Ryukyu Shintō ki 1606 However the Chuzan Seikan was the first to make reference to the Tenson shi 天孫氏 who supposedly descended from the goddess 11 Without showing a clear genealogy the official history books connect the Tenson dynasty remotely to the Eiso dynasty Eiso s mother dreamed that the sun intruded into her bosom giving a miraculous birth to Eiso but Eiso s foster father was said to have descended from the Tenson dynasty Similarly Satto was said to have been mothered by a swan maiden Shō En was believed to have descended from Gihon of the Shunten dynasty i e the second Shō family originated from the Minamoto clan or some other king It is not clear why the Chuzan Seikan did not provide a special link to the First Shō dynasty 11 Official narrative editTenson dynasty edit The founder of the Tenson dynasty 13 was a descendant of Amamikyu 阿摩美久 the goddess of creation The 25 generations of the Tenson dynasty ruled the land for 17 802 years but their names are unknown Shunten dynasty edit The Shunten dynasty lasted from AD 1187 to AD 1259 14 In 1186 the 25th ruler s throne was usurped by Riyu Minamoto no Tametomo s son Shunten overthrew Riyu the next year becoming the king Name Kanji Divine name 15 Reign Age at deathShunten 舜天 Sonton尊敦 1187 1237 71Shunbajunki 舜馬順煕 Sonomasu 其益orSonomasumi 其益美 1238 1248 63Gihon 義本 Unknown 1249 1259 Eiso dynasty edit The Eiso dynasty lasted from AD 1260 to AD 1349 13 In 1259 Gihon who was the last king of the Shunten dynasty abdicated his throne Fathered by the sun Eiso succeeded him During the reign of Tamagusuku the state was divided into three polities The King of Nanzan Sannan and the King of Hokuzan Sanhoku came to compete with the King of Chuzan Name Kanji Divine name 15 Reign Age at deathEiso 英祖 Wezo no tedako英祖日子 1260 1299 70Taisei 大成 Unknown 1300 1308 9 or 61Eiji 英慈 Unknown 1309 1313 45Tamagusuku 玉城 Unknown 1314 1336 40Seii 西威 Unknown 1337 1354 21Satto dynasty edit The Satto dynasty lasted from AD 1350 to AD 1405 13 Satto the son of a peasant and a swan maiden replaced Seii as the King of Chuzan Satto started a tributary relation to the Ming emperor Name Kanji Divine name 15 Reign Age at deathSatto 察度 Oho mamono大真物 1355 1397 74Bunei 武寧 Naga no mamono中之真物 1398 1406 50First Shō dynasty edit The First Shō dynasty lasted from AD 1429 to AD 1469 16 Shō Hashi the virtual founder of the First Shō dynasty overthrew Bunei in 1406 He installed his father Shō Shishō as the nominal King of Chuzan Shō Hashi annihilated the King of Hokuzan Sanhoku in 1416 In 1421 after the death of his father Shō Hashi became the King of Chuzan He overthrew the King of Nanzan Sannan until 1429 unifying the island The surname Shō 尚 was given by the Ming emperor 17 Name Kanji Divine name 15 Reign Age at deathShō Shishō 尚思紹 Kimishi mamono君志真物 1407 1421 67Shō Hashi 尚巴志 Sejitaka mamono勢治高真物 1422 1439 67Shō Chu 尚忠 Unknown 1440 1442 54Shō Shitatsu 尚思達 Kimiteda君日 1443 1449 41Shō Kinpuku 尚金福 Kimishi君志 1450 1453 55Shō Taikyu 尚泰久 Nanojiyomoi 那之志与茂伊also calledOho yononushi 大世主 1454 1460 45Shō Toku 尚徳 Hachiman no aji 八幡之按司also calledSetaka ō 世高王 1461 1469 29Second Shō dynasty edit The Second Shō dynasty lasted from AD 1470 to AD 1879 16 When Shō Toku the last king of the First Shō dynasty died in 1469 courtiers launched a coup d etat and elected Shō En as king He became the founder of the Second Shō dynasty The kingdom was at its peak during the reign of his son Shō Shin In 1609 Satsuma Domain conquered the Ryukyu Kingdom From then on Ryukyu was a vassal state of Satsuma Domain while the king was ordered to keep its tributary relation with China The kingdom became a domain of Japan in 1872 In 1879 Japan replaced Ryukyu Domain with Okinawa Prefecture formally annexing the islands King Shō Tai was dethroned and later given the title of marquis Name Kanji Divine name 15 Warabi naa Nanui Reign Age at deathShō En 尚円 Kanamaru aji sohesuwetsugiwaunise金丸按司添末続王仁子 Umitukugani思徳金 1470 1476 61Shō Sen i 尚宣威 Nishi no yononushi西之世主 1477 48Shō Shin 尚真 Ogiyakamowi於義也嘉茂慧 Makatotarugani真加戸樽金 1477 1526 61Shō Sei 尚清 Tenitsugi no ajisohe天続之按司添 Manikiyotarugani真仁堯樽金 1527 1555 59Shō Gen 尚元 Tedahajime ajisohe日始按司添 Kanichiyo金千代 1556 1572 44Shō Ei 尚永 Wezoniyasuhe ajisohe 英祖仁耶添按司添also calledTedahokori ō 日豊操王or Tedayomutori ō 日豊操王 1573 1586 30Shō Nei 尚寧 Tedagasuhe ajisohe日賀末按司添 Umitukugani思徳金 1587 1620 56Shō Hō 尚豊 Tenigiyasuhe ajisohe天喜也末按司添 Umigurugani思五郎金 Chōshō朝昌 1621 1640 50Shō Ken 尚賢 Umimatsugani思松金 1641 1647 23Shō Shitsu 尚質 Umitukugani思徳金 1648 1668 39Shō Tei 尚貞 Umigurugani思五郎金 Chōshu朝周 1669 1709 64Shō Eki 尚益 Umigurugani思五郎金 1710 1712 34Shō Kei 尚敬 Umitukugani思徳金 Chōshi朝糸 1713 1751 52Shō Boku 尚穆 Umigurugani思五郎金 Chōkō朝康 1752 1795 55Shō On 尚温 Umigurugani思五郎金 Chōkoku朝克 1796 1802 18Shō Sei 尚成 Umitukugani思徳金 1803 3Shō Kō 尚灝 Umijirugani思次良金 Chōshō朝相 1804 1828 47Shō Iku 尚育 Umitukugani思徳金 Chōken朝現 1829 1847 34Shō Tai 尚泰 Umijirugani思次良金 Chōken朝憲 1848 1879 58Honored as king posthumously edit Name Kanji Warabi naa Nanui Father of NotesShō Shoku 尚稷 Shō En Shō Sen i posthumously honored as king in 1699stripped in 1719Shō I 尚懿 Umitarugani思太郎金 Chōken朝賢 Shō Nei posthumously honored as king in 1699stripped in 1719Shō Kyu 尚久 Masanrugani真三郎金 Chōkō朝公 Shō Hō posthumously honored as king in 1699stripped in 1719Shō Jun 尚純 Umitukugani思徳金 Shō Eki Crown Prince before being able to succeed to the throneShō Tetsu 尚哲 Umitukugani思徳金 Shō On Shō Kō Crown Prince before being able to succeed to the throneReferences editCitations edit The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 Encyclopaedia Britannica inc p 363 ISBN 9780852294000 In 1872 the Meiji government conferred on the last king of Ryukyu Sho Tai the title of vassal king and in the following year took over the island s foreign affairs Japan in the Muromachi Age East Asia Program Cornell University 2001 p 173 ISBN 9781885445094 In 1508 Shimazu sent a letter to the king of Ryukyu 中山世鑑 琉球國中山王世繼總論 in Chinese 尚巴志及父 尚思紹係追封且賜之以冠服綵幣等物 琉球國王尚姓此始 中山世譜 巻九 in Chinese 琉球國王 遣毛文和等 賚捧表文方物 清實錄 聖祖仁皇帝實錄 卷之一百四 in Chinese 賜琉球國王 御書中山世土四大字 通航一覧 巻之五 in Japanese 正保元年七月三日 琉球国王之使者上下七十人なり 社参として当地発足 赴日光山云々 松平薩摩守所令同道也 United States Congressional Serial Set Vol 1672 U S Government Printing Office 1876 p 313 The latter country claims sovereignty over the islands and the so called King of Lew Chew is said to be now in Japan the guest of the Mikado whose superior authority I am told he recognizes a b 清實錄 世祖章皇帝實錄 卷之八十五 in Chinese 齎敕印 封琉球國中山王世子尚質 為中山王 通航一覧 巻之三 in Japanese 慶長十五年五月十六日 家久中山王を率ゐて鹿児島を発し 八月六日駿府に参着す Ikemiya Masaharu 池宮正治 2015 Ryukyu no rekishi jojutsu Chuzan Seikan kara Kyuyō e 琉球の歴史叙述 中山世鑑 から 球陽 へ Ryukyu shi bunka ron 琉球史文化論 in Japanese Kasama Shoin 笠間書院 pp 3 21 a b c d e Dana Masayuki 田名真之 2008 Ryukyu ōken no keifu ishiki to Minamoto no Tametomo torai denshō 琉球王権の系譜意識と源為朝渡来伝承 Ryuyuan Royal Succession Ideology and The Minamoto Temetomo Legend In Kyushu shigaku kenkyukai 九州史学研究会 ed Kyōkai no aidentiti 境界のアイデンティティ in Japanese Iwata Shoin 岩田書院 pp 181 196 a b Ikemyia Masaharu 池宮正治 2015 Rekishi to setsuwa no aida Katarareru rekishi 歴史と説話の間 語られる歴史 Ryukyu shi bunka ron 琉球史文化論 in Japanese Kasama Shoin 笠間書院 pp 23 52 a b c Richard Pearson 2013 Ancient Ryukyu An Archaeological Study of Island Communities University of Hawaii Press ISBN 9780824865894 The victorious Ryukyu Kingdom compiled the Chuzan seikan as its history in the seventeenth century AD outlining a succession of three early dynasties Haneji 1983 These were the Tenson dynasty the Eiso dynasty AD 1260 to 1349 and the Satto dynasty AD 1350 to 1405 Ryukyu Islands United States Civil Administration 1950 1972 Shōgai Hōdōkyoku 琉球列島米国民政府涉外報道局 1970 守礼の光 守礼の光 2 12 In reviewing history it can be noted that there was political turmoil in the Ryukyus in the 1250s during the reign of King Gihon the last king of the Shunten dynasty In the 1350s the Eiso dynasty was overturned and Urasoe Anji Satto became the new King of the Ryukyus a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e 琉球国王の神号と おもろさうし PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2021 10 06 Retrieved 2019 11 24 a b Richard Pearson 2009 Okinawa The Rise of an Island Kingdom Archaeological and Cultural Perspectives Proceedings of a Symposium Kingdom of the Coral Seas November 17 2007 at the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Archaeopress In an alternate scheme the First Sho dynasty 1429 1469 was established by Sho Hashi in 1429 and the Second Sho dynasty 1470 1879 was established by Sho En in 1470 ed a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kerr George Okinawa The History of an Island People Tokyo Tuttle 2000 p 89 Sources edit Kerr George H 1965 Okinawa the History of an Island People Rutland Vermont C E Tuttle Co OCLC 39242121External links edit中山世鑑 中山世譜 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title King of Ryukyu amp oldid 1183828273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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