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This crown is one which had been brought by the royal family to [[Tokyo]] when the kingdom was [[Ryukyu Shobun|abolished]] in [[1879]]; another crown, which had remained in Okinawa, is believed to have been stolen or destroyed in 1945. Kept in the [[Nakagusuku udun|Nakagusuku Palace]]<ref>Located just outside [[Shuri castle]], and not to be confused with [[Nakagusuku gusuku]], located elsewhere on the island.</ref> from the 1870s until that time, along with a collection of other royal treasures and records not taken to Tokyo, it was hidden during the Battle of Okinawa, along with a number of other precious royal treasures in a drainage ditch near the palace. Of the eight royal stewards charged with caring for these objects, only the most senior stewards were permitted to touch the crown. Maehira Bokei, a junior steward around 20 years old at the time, was the only one of the eight still alive as of 1997. When he and the other seven royal stewards returned after the battle ended to recover the objects, however, they found that all the objects were missing. A precious copy of the ''[[Omoro soshi|Omoro sôshi]]'', which had been among the items hidden in that same ditch, later surfaced in Boston; it was among a number of objects which had been taken by intelligence officer Comdr. Carl W. Sternfelt, who relinquished them to agents of the US government in 1953, who in turn promptly returned them to Okinawa that same year, in conjunction with events celebrating the 100th anniversary of the coming of [[Commodore Perry]] to Japan. Kishaba Shizuo of the Ryukyu America Historical Society, however, spent much of the remainder of the 20th century convinced that Sternfelt had taken the crown as well, and actively seeking to find and recover it; Sternfelt's family insists they have never seen it, and it remains unknown today if this second crown still survives.
 
This crown is one which had been brought by the royal family to [[Tokyo]] when the kingdom was [[Ryukyu Shobun|abolished]] in [[1879]]; another crown, which had remained in Okinawa, is believed to have been stolen or destroyed in 1945. Kept in the [[Nakagusuku udun|Nakagusuku Palace]]<ref>Located just outside [[Shuri castle]], and not to be confused with [[Nakagusuku gusuku]], located elsewhere on the island.</ref> from the 1870s until that time, along with a collection of other royal treasures and records not taken to Tokyo, it was hidden during the Battle of Okinawa, along with a number of other precious royal treasures in a drainage ditch near the palace. Of the eight royal stewards charged with caring for these objects, only the most senior stewards were permitted to touch the crown. Maehira Bokei, a junior steward around 20 years old at the time, was the only one of the eight still alive as of 1997. When he and the other seven royal stewards returned after the battle ended to recover the objects, however, they found that all the objects were missing. A precious copy of the ''[[Omoro soshi|Omoro sôshi]]'', which had been among the items hidden in that same ditch, later surfaced in Boston; it was among a number of objects which had been taken by intelligence officer Comdr. Carl W. Sternfelt, who relinquished them to agents of the US government in 1953, who in turn promptly returned them to Okinawa that same year, in conjunction with events celebrating the 100th anniversary of the coming of [[Commodore Perry]] to Japan. Kishaba Shizuo of the Ryukyu America Historical Society, however, spent much of the remainder of the 20th century convinced that Sternfelt had taken the crown as well, and actively seeking to find and recover it; Sternfelt's family insists they have never seen it, and it remains unknown today if this second crown still survives.
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The crown prince, meanwhile, often wore a different style of crown, called ''usanmô''.<ref name=zenshu318/>
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Prior to investiture, the king (in some respects, still technically the crown prince) wore a Chinese-style court cap called ''wūshāmào'' (烏紗帽, J: ''usanmô'').<ref name=zenshu318/>
    
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