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Aji (Ryūkyū)
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Aji (Ryūkyū) : ウィキペディア英語版
Aji (Ryūkyū)

An ''aji'', ''anji'', or ''azu'' was a ruler of a petty kingdom in the history of the Ryukyu Islands. The word later became a title and rank of nobility in the Ryūkyū Kingdom. It is said to be related to the Japanese ''aruji'' ("master"), and the pronunciation varied throughout the islands. It ranked next below a prince among nobility. The sons of princes and the eldest sons of ''aji'' became ''aji.'' An ''aji'' established a noble family equivalent to a ''miyake'' of Japan.
The ''aji'' arose around the twelfth century as local leaders began to build ''gusuku'' (castles in the Ryūkyū style). Shō Hashi was an ''aji'' who later unified the Ryūkyūs as king. The title ''aji'' variously designated sons of the king and regional leaders. During the Second Shō Dynasty, when the ''aji'' settled near Shuri Castle, the word came to denote an aristocrat in the castle town.
A pattern for addressing a male ''aji'' began with the place he ruled and ended with the word ''aji'', for example, "Nago ''Aji''." For women, the suffix ''ganashi'' or ''kanashi'' (加那志) followed: "Nago ''Aji-ganashi.''"
== List of Aji (1873) ==

*Oroku Aji (Oroku Udun)
*Yuntanza Aji (Yuntanza Udun)
*Yoshimura Aji (Yoshimura Udun)
*Yonashiro Aji (Yonashiro Udun)
*Tomigusuku Aji (Tomigusuku Udun)
*Osato Aji (Osato Udun)
*Urasoe Aji (Urasoe Udun)
*Tamagawa Aji (Tamagawa Udun)
*Kunigami Aji (Kunigami Udun)
*Omura Aji (Omura Udun)
*Motobu Aji (Motobu Udun)
*Misato Aji (Misato Udun)
*Haneji Aji (Haneji Udun)
*Nago Aji (Nago Udun)
*Kin Aji (Kin Udun)
*Mabuni Aji (Mabuni Udun)
*Nakazato Aji (Nakazato Udun)
*Goeku Aji (Goeku Udun)
*Ogimi Aji (Ogimi Udun)
*Gushikami Aji (Gushikami Udun)
*Mabuni Aji (Mabuni Udun)
*Tamashiro Aji (Tamashiro Udun)
*Gushikawa Aji (Gushikawa Udun)
*Takamine Aji (Takamine Udun)
*Kushi Aji (Kushi Udun)
*Katsuren Aji (Katsuren Udun)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Aji (Ryūkyū)」の詳細全文を読む



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