Difference between revisions of "Sho Dokyo"

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(Created page with "*''Died: 1790/10/13, Tomonoura'' *''Titles'': 與世山親雲上 ''(Yoseyama peechin)'' *''Chinese-style name'': 道亨 ''(Shou Doukyou)'' *''Japanese'': ...")
 
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*''Born: c. 1767-1768''
 
*''Died: [[1790]]/10/13, [[Tomonoura]]''
 
*''Died: [[1790]]/10/13, [[Tomonoura]]''
 
*''Titles'': 與世山親雲上 ''(Yoseyama [[peechin]])''
 
*''Titles'': 與世山親雲上 ''(Yoseyama [[peechin]])''
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Yoseyama ''peechin'' Chôeki, also known by the [[Okinawan name|Chinese-style name]] Shô Dôkyô, was a young [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryukyuan]] scholar-aristocrat, who served as a musician in the [[1790]] [[Ryukyuan embassy to Edo]].
 
Yoseyama ''peechin'' Chôeki, also known by the [[Okinawan name|Chinese-style name]] Shô Dôkyô, was a young [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryukyuan]] scholar-aristocrat, who served as a musician in the [[1790]] [[Ryukyuan embassy to Edo]].
  
Dôkyô never reached [[Edo]]. He died on 1790/10/13, in the port town of [[Tomonoura]] (near [[Hiroshima]]), and was buried at the temple [[Komatsu-ji]] in that town. His tombstone reads 「琉球司楽向生碑」.
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Dôkyô never reached [[Edo]]. He died on 1790/10/13, at the age of 22, in the port town of [[Tomonoura]] (near [[Hiroshima]]), and was buried at the temple [[Komatsu-ji]] in that town. His tombstone reads 「琉球司楽向生碑」.
  
 
Six years later, in [[1796]], his grandfather, [[Fukuyama Choki|Fukuyama Chôki]]<!--譜久山親方朝紀-->, visited the temple and donated a plaque reading 「容顔如見」.
 
Six years later, in [[1796]], his grandfather, [[Fukuyama Choki|Fukuyama Chôki]]<!--譜久山親方朝紀-->, visited the temple and donated a plaque reading 「容顔如見」.

Revision as of 00:44, 21 April 2013

  • Born: c. 1767-1768
  • Died: 1790/10/13, Tomonoura
  • Titles: 與世山親雲上 (Yoseyama peechin)
  • Chinese-style name: 道亨 (Shou Doukyou)
  • Japanese: 朝易 (Chou eki)

Yoseyama peechin Chôeki, also known by the Chinese-style name Shô Dôkyô, was a young Ryukyuan scholar-aristocrat, who served as a musician in the 1790 Ryukyuan embassy to Edo.

Dôkyô never reached Edo. He died on 1790/10/13, at the age of 22, in the port town of Tomonoura (near Hiroshima), and was buried at the temple Komatsu-ji in that town. His tombstone reads 「琉球司楽向生碑」.

Six years later, in 1796, his grandfather, Fukuyama Chôki, visited the temple and donated a plaque reading 「容顔如見」.

References

  • Ryûkyû shisetsu, Edo he iku! 琉球使節、江戸へ行く!, Okinawa Prefectural Museum (2009), 10.
  • Maehira Fusaaki, "Edo nobori no tabi to bohimei" 江戸上りの旅と墓碑銘, Okinawa Bunka Kenkyû 21 (1995), 83ff.