Difference between revisions of "Lin Hongnian"

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*''Chinese/Japanese'': [[林]] 鴻年 ''(Lín Hóngnián / Rin Kounen)''
 
*''Chinese/Japanese'': [[林]] 鴻年 ''(Lín Hóngnián / Rin Kounen)''
  
Lín Hóngnián was a [[Qing Dynasty]] scholar-official, who served as the head of a [[Chinese investiture mission]] to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] in [[1838]], for the investiture of King [[Sho Iku|Shô Iku]].
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Lín Hóngnián was a [[Qing Dynasty]] scholar-official, who served as the head of a [[Chinese investiture mission]] to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] in [[1838]], for the [[investiture]] of King [[Sho Iku|Shô Iku]].
  
 
His vice-envoy on the 1838 mission to Ryûkyû was [[Gao Renjian]]. While visiting the Ryukyuan royal villa at [[Shikinaen]], Lin gifted King Shô Iku a stone stele reading ''gān lǐ yán líng'' (甘醴延齢, "sweet saké, long life"), and a work of eight lines of calligraphy on paper. This work of calligraphy later came into the collection of [[Sho Masako|Shô Masako]], the sixth daughter of King [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]], who donated it to the Ryukyuan Museum during the postwar Occupation period; it remains in the collection of the Okinawa Prefectural Museum today.
 
His vice-envoy on the 1838 mission to Ryûkyû was [[Gao Renjian]]. While visiting the Ryukyuan royal villa at [[Shikinaen]], Lin gifted King Shô Iku a stone stele reading ''gān lǐ yán líng'' (甘醴延齢, "sweet saké, long life"), and a work of eight lines of calligraphy on paper. This work of calligraphy later came into the collection of [[Sho Masako|Shô Masako]], the sixth daughter of King [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]], who donated it to the Ryukyuan Museum during the postwar Occupation period; it remains in the collection of the Okinawa Prefectural Museum today.

Latest revision as of 12:44, 31 March 2018

A work of calligraphy by Lin, given as a gift to King Shô Iku of the Ryûkyû Kingdom
  • Born: 1805
  • Died: 1885
  • Chinese/Japanese: 鴻年 (Lín Hóngnián / Rin Kounen)

Lín Hóngnián was a Qing Dynasty scholar-official, who served as the head of a Chinese investiture mission to the Ryûkyû Kingdom in 1838, for the investiture of King Shô Iku.

His vice-envoy on the 1838 mission to Ryûkyû was Gao Renjian. While visiting the Ryukyuan royal villa at Shikinaen, Lin gifted King Shô Iku a stone stele reading gān lǐ yán líng (甘醴延齢, "sweet saké, long life"), and a work of eight lines of calligraphy on paper. This work of calligraphy later came into the collection of Shô Masako, the sixth daughter of King Shô Tai, who donated it to the Ryukyuan Museum during the postwar Occupation period; it remains in the collection of the Okinawa Prefectural Museum today.

References

  • Gallery labels, Okinawa Prefectural Museum.[1]
  • Plaques at Shikinaen.