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Goeku Chōsei

Index Goeku Chōsei

also known by his Chinese style name, was a bureaucrat of the Ryukyu Kingdom. [1]

Table of Contents

  1. 10 relations: Chūzan Seifu, Edo, Japan, Rizō Takeuchi, Ryukyu Kingdom, Ryukyuan missions to Edo, Sanshikan, Shō Sen'i, Shō Tei, Ueekata.

  2. 17th-century Ryukyuan people
  3. Asian people stubs

Chūzan Seifu

was an official history of the Ryūkyū Kingdom compiled between 1697 and 1701 by a group of scholar-officials led by Sai Taku.

See Goeku Chōsei and Chūzan Seifu

Edo

Edo (江戸||"bay-entrance" or "estuary"), also romanized as Jedo, Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name of Tokyo.

See Goeku Chōsei and Edo

Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia, located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asian mainland.

See Goeku Chōsei and Japan

Rizō Takeuchi

was a Japanese historian.

See Goeku Chōsei and Rizō Takeuchi

Ryukyu Kingdom

The Ryukyu Kingdom was a kingdom in the Ryukyu Islands from 1429 to 1879.

See Goeku Chōsei and Ryukyu Kingdom

Ryukyuan missions to Edo

Over the course of Japan's Edo period, the Ryūkyū Kingdom sent eighteen, the capital of Tokugawa Japan.

See Goeku Chōsei and Ryukyuan missions to Edo

Sanshikan

The Sanshikan (三司官 sanshikwan), or Council of Three, was a government body of the Ryūkyū Kingdom, which originally developed out of a council of regents.

See Goeku Chōsei and Sanshikan

Shō Sen'i

was a king of the Ryukyu Kingdom, the second ruler of the second Shō dynasty.

See Goeku Chōsei and Shō Sen'i

Shō Tei

was the 11th King of the Second Shō Dynasty of the Ryukyu Kingdom, who held the throne from 1669 until his death in 1709.

See Goeku Chōsei and Shō Tei

Ueekata

, in the Okinawan language, was the highest rank in the yukatchu aristocracy of the former Ryukyu Kingdom (modern-day Okinawa, Japan), though it was still below the aji nobility.

See Goeku Chōsei and Ueekata

See also

17th-century Ryukyuan people

Asian people stubs

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goeku_Chōsei