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*''Japanese'': 砂糖 ''(satou)''
 
*''Japanese'': 砂糖 ''(satou)''
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Sugar cane was first introduced into the [[Ryukyu Islands|Ryûkyû Islands]] in [[1374]]. It soon became one of the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom's]] chief exports / [[tribute]] goods.
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Sugar cane was first introduced into the [[Ryukyu Islands|Ryûkyû Islands]] in [[1374]]. It soon became one of the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom's]] chief exports / [[tribute]] goods. Between sugar obtained from the kingdom, and sugar grown in the [[Amami Islands]] (taken from the kingdom and under the direct control of [[Satsuma han]] since [[1609]]), Satsuma served as the chief source of sugar in Japan throughout the [[Edo period]].
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Sugar was not only grown in the Ryûkyûs, but was also obtained by Ryukyuan trading ships in Southeast Asia.
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==Production, Taxes & Monopolies==
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In the 1620s, a pair of young Ryukyuan aristocrats introduced to the kingdom advanced sugar processing techniques which they had studied in China; sugar plantations in the islands quickly began to take off. Previously, mainland Japan obtained brown, white, and rock sugar chiefly from [[Chinese in Nagasaki|Chinese]] and [[VOC|Dutch]] merchants in [[Nagasaki]].
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==Production, Taxes & Monopolies==
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The Ryûkyû Kingdom's government claimed a royal monopoly on sales of sugar and turmeric within the kingdom in [[1647]], helping the kingdom afford its repayments on loans from [[Satsuma han]]. Fifty years later, the kingdom placed restrictions on the planting of these two crops; these restrictions wouldn't be lifted until [[1888]].
In the 1620s, a pair of young Ryukyuan aristocrats introduced to the kingdom advanced sugar processing techniques which they had studied in China; sugar plantations in the islands quickly began to take off.
     −
The Ryûkyû Kingdom's government claimed a royal monopoly on sales of sugar and turmeric in [[1647]], helping the kingdom afford its repayments on loans from [[Satsuma han]]. Fifty years later, the kingdom placed restrictions on the planting of these two crops; these restrictions wouldn't be lifted until [[1888]].
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The kingdom began, in [[1666]], to pay one-third of its annual tribute payments to Satsuma in sugar. Sugar was not only grown in the Ryûkyûs, but was also obtained by Ryukyuan trading ships in Southeast Asia.  
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The kingdom began, in [[1666]], to pay one-third of its annual tribute payments to Satsuma in sugar.
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Meanwhile, though Satsuma dominated the sugar market in Japan, some sugar was also imported at Nagasaki, with Dutch merchants selling Javanese sugar and Chinese merchants selling Taiwanese sugar following the [[Qing Dynasty]] quelling of the last of the [[Ming loyalists]] on [[Taiwan]] in [[1683]]. Sugar also began to be grown and refined in small quantities in [[Owari han|Owari]], [[Wakayama han|Wakayama]], and several [[han|domains]] in western Honshû and Shikoku after the shogun obtained information about sugar cane cultivation from Satsuma and planted a test crop at his personal villa. By 1800 or so, consumption of domestic sugar exceeded that of imported sugar.
    
Following the [[Ryukyu Shobun|overthrow of the kingdom and annexation of its land by Japan]], sugar taxes continued to be paid in kind (i.e., in sugar, rather than in cash) until [[1903]]. Private sales of sugar were prohibited until this tax was paid, and when sugar was paid to the [[Okinawa prefecture|Okinawa prefectural government]], it was at a set price below the market price. The prefecture would then sell the sugar at market in [[Osaka]], at market prices, making a considerable profit.<ref>[[Gregory Smits|Smits, Gregory]]. ''Visions of Ryukyu''. University of Hawaii Press, 1999. p148.</ref>
 
Following the [[Ryukyu Shobun|overthrow of the kingdom and annexation of its land by Japan]], sugar taxes continued to be paid in kind (i.e., in sugar, rather than in cash) until [[1903]]. Private sales of sugar were prohibited until this tax was paid, and when sugar was paid to the [[Okinawa prefecture|Okinawa prefectural government]], it was at a set price below the market price. The prefecture would then sell the sugar at market in [[Osaka]], at market prices, making a considerable profit.<ref>[[Gregory Smits|Smits, Gregory]]. ''Visions of Ryukyu''. University of Hawaii Press, 1999. p148.</ref>
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