Difference between revisions of "Wang Ji"

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(Created page with "*''Born: 1636'' *''Died: 1699'' *''Chinese'': 汪楫 ''(Wāng Jí)'' Wang Ji was a Qing Dynasty Chinese official who traveled to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kin...")
 
 
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Wang Ji was a [[Qing Dynasty]] Chinese official who traveled to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] as head of an [[Chinese investiture envoys|investiture mission]] in [[1683]].
 
Wang Ji was a [[Qing Dynasty]] Chinese official who traveled to the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]] as head of an [[Chinese investiture envoys|investiture mission]] in [[1683]].
  
He remained in the islands for five months, where in addition to leading the investiture ceremony, he produced numerous pieces of calligraphy for [[Shuri castle]] and for various Buddhist and [[Shiseibyo|Confucian temples]]. Upon his return to China, he composed two volumes about Ryûkyû: the two-volume ''Zhōngshān yángé zhì'' (中山沿革志, "Record on the successive changes of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]]"), and the four-volume ''Shǐ liúqiú zá lù'' (使琉球雜錄, "Miscellaneous records on the mission to the Ryūkyūs").
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He remained in the islands for five months, where in addition to leading the [[investiture]] ceremony, he produced numerous pieces of calligraphy for [[Shuri castle]] and for various Buddhist and [[Shiseibyo|Confucian temples]]. Upon his return to China, he composed two volumes about Ryûkyû: the two-volume ''Zhōngshān yángé zhì'' (中山沿革志, "Record on the successive changes of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]]"), and the four-volume ''Shǐ liúqiú zá lù'' (使琉球雜錄, "Miscellaneous records on the mission to the Ryūkyūs").
  
 
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Latest revision as of 11:49, 31 March 2018

  • Born: 1636
  • Died: 1699
  • Chinese: 汪楫 (Wāng Jí)

Wang Ji was a Qing Dynasty Chinese official who traveled to the Ryûkyû Kingdom as head of an investiture mission in 1683.

He remained in the islands for five months, where in addition to leading the investiture ceremony, he produced numerous pieces of calligraphy for Shuri castle and for various Buddhist and Confucian temples. Upon his return to China, he composed two volumes about Ryûkyû: the two-volume Zhōngshān yángé zhì (中山沿革志, "Record on the successive changes of Chûzan"), and the four-volume Shǐ liúqiú zá lù (使琉球雜錄, "Miscellaneous records on the mission to the Ryūkyūs").

References

  • Angela Schottenhammer, “Empire and Periphery? The Qing Empire’s Relations with Japan and the Ryūkyūs (1644–c. 1800), a Comparison.” The Medieval History Journal 16, no. 1 (April 1, 2013): 184.