翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ 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
・ Shōdo Island


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Shō Ten : ウィキペディア英語版
Shō Ten

was . He lost that title upon the abolition of the kingdom and the abdication of the king, his father, Shō Tai, in 1879, and later succeeded to the title of in the ''kazoku'' peerage following his father's death in 1901.
== Biography ==
Shō Ten was born in Shuri and was from birth crown prince to the Ryūkyū Kingdom. He underwent his coming of age ceremony in 1878 and was married the same year.
In March 1879, his father Shō Tai formally abdicated upon the orders of the Meiji government, which abolished the kingdom, transforming ''Ryūkyū domain'' into Okinawa Prefecture, with officials appointed from Tokyo to administer the islands.〔Kerr. p381.〕 The former king was ordered to report to Tokyo, but feigning illness, he temporarily found shelter at Shō Ten’s palace. Shō Ten was sent to Tokyo as a hostage and partial appeasement as Ryūkyūan officials searched for ways to delay the former king’s departure.〔
*〕
Following his father's death and his succession as Marquis and head of the Shō family in 1901, Shō Ten and his family gave up the trappings of traditional Ryūkyūan royal court life, costume, court language, and ritual, and adopted those of the Japanese peerage.
As Marquis, Shō Ten held a hereditary seat in the House of Peers in the Imperial Diet. He was joined in representing Okinawa by a Japanese resident appointed to represent the prefecture's wealthiest taxpayers for the first time in 1918.〔Kerr, George H. ''Okinawa: The History of an Island People''. (revised ed.) Tokyo: Tuttle Publishing, 2003. p428.〕
The Marquis died on September 20, 1920 in his mansion in Shuri and was entombed six days later in Tamaudun, the royal mausoleum near Shuri Castle, in accordance with traditional Ryūkyūan royal funerary rites. He would be the last member of the Shō family to be honored in such a manner.〔Kerr. p453.〕 The family head was succeeded by his eldest son Shō Shō (尚昌), then to Hiroshi Shō.


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 Ten」の詳細全文を読む



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