翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Shō Kinpuku
・ Shō Kō
・ Shō Nei
・ Shō On
・ Shō River
・ Shō Sei
・ Shō Sei (r. 1803)
・ Shō Sen'i
・ Shō Shin
・ Shō Shishō
・ Shō Shitatsu
・ Shō Shitsu
・ Shō Shōken
・ Shō Tai
・ Shō Taikyū
Shō Tei
・ Shō Ten
・ Shō Toku
・ Shōan
・ Shōbara Station
・ Shōbara, Hiroshima
・ Shōbayashi Shōrin-ryū
・ Shōboku, Okayama
・ Shōbu, Saitama
・ Shōbōgenzō
・ Shōbōgenzō Zuimonki
・ Shōchō
・ Shōchū
・ Shōchū (era)
・ Shōden Station


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Shō Tei : ウィキペディア英語版
Shō Tei
was the 11th King of the Second Shō Dynasty of the Ryūkyū Kingdom, who held the throne from 1669 until his death in 1709.〔"Shō Tei." ''Okinawa konpakuto jiten'' (沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia"). (Ryukyu Shimpo ) (琉球新報). 1 March 2003. Accessed 29 January 2010.〕 He was the ruler of Ryūkyū at the time of the compiling of the Chūzan Seifu (中山世譜) (a document documenting Ryūkyūan history).
Shō Tei received a Confucian education, and was the first Ryūkyūan monarch to do so.〔
Shō Tei was the monarch at the time when the Japanese bakufu began taking notice of trade of Chinese goods passing through the islands, during the period of sakoku (when no contact between Japan and the outside world was foreign policy). The bakufu, instead of punishing the Ryūkyūan government, ordered detailed reports on the trade in 1685. The following year, trade was restricted to 2,000 ryō worth per term, and was only able to be sold in markets that did not compete with the Dutch enclave in Nagasaki. The result of such trade made the Ryūkyūan economy boom.〔
Shō Tei is the final Ryūkyūan monarch to be given a god's name in official histories, due to the changing image of the position (less a deity, more a Confucian sage).〔
He was buried at the royal mausoleum Tamaudun in Shuri.

==References==




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「Shō Tei」の詳細全文を読む



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