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==History==
 
==History==
It is not clear when the castle was built. Most sources place its construction during the reign of [[Satto]], king of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]] (r. c. 1355-1395), some as early as [[1237]]<ref>Kerr. p50. Pointing to an entry in the ''[[Kyuyo|Kyûyô]]'' which indicates the construction in [[1392]] of a tall tower several ''jô'' high, called Takayosôri 高よそうり, architectural historian Matayoshi Shinzô 又吉真三 suggests that Shuri castle already existed at that time. Further, he notes that the [[1372]] Ming embassy seems to have been sent to Shuri (not Urasoe), and that the [[36 Min families]] who founded [[Kumemura]] in 1392 did so in Kume/Naha, and not at [[Makiminato]] near Urasoe, suggesting that Shuri was already the political center by that time. "Shurijô ha Ryûkyû kenchiku bunka no shûtaisei" 首里城は琉球建築文化の集大成, ''Shurijô fukugen charity tokubetsu kôen'' 首里城復元チャリティ特別公演 (Naha: Kudaka Shôkichi geinô kikaku 久高将吉芸能企画, 1987), 104-105.</ref>, but all agree that it was definitely the primary royal palace by [[1427]], during the reign of [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]] (r. 1422-1439), first king of the united Kingdom of Ryûkyû. That the castle was extant at that time is confirmed by the inscription on the [[Ankoku-zan jukaboku stele]], the oldest example of Okinawan writing surviving today, erected there in 1427.<ref>Matayoshi, 105.; "[http://ryukyushimpo.jp/news/storyid-40170-storytopic-121.html Ankokuzan jukaboku no kihi]," Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia, Ryukyu Shimpo, 1 March 2003.</ref> The stele also relates that [[Kaiki]] (Huái Jī), a prominent Chinese-born official in service to [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]], oversaw the landscaping of the castle grounds in accordance with ''[[feng shui]]'' / geomantic beliefs and traditions. After traveling to China in [[1417]] and coming back to Ryûkyû, Kaiki directed the construction of the [[Ryutan|Ryûtan]] pond below the castle, the planting of flowering trees around the pond, and the construction of an artificial hill to the west of the castle.<ref name=maritime93>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 93-94.</ref>
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It is not clear when the castle was built. Most sources place its construction during the reign of [[Satto]], king of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]] (r. c. 1355-1395), some as early as [[1237]].<ref>Kerr. p50.</ref> Official histories produced by the kingdom in the 18th-19th centuries, such as the ''[[Kyuyo|Kyûyô]]'', ''[[Chuzan seikan|Chûzan seikan]]'', and ''[[Ryukyu-koku yuraiki|Ryûkyû-koku yuraiki]]'', indicate that a tall tower several ''jô'' high, called Takayosôri 高世層裡, was constructed during Satto's reign, to the south of the Shicha-nu-unaa, and faced north. This location corresponds to what would later become the Kyô-no-uchi, the most sacred space within the Shuri ''gusuku'' grounds.<ref>Uezato Takashi 上里隆史, “Ko-Ryūkyū ki ni okeru Shurijō no yōsō to hensen” 「古琉球における首里城の様相と返遷」, in ''Shurijō o toku'' 首里城を解く, eds. Takara Kurayoshi 高良倉吉 and Shimamura Kōichi 島村幸一, Tokyo: Bensei shuppan (2021), 64.</ref>
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Though the timing of the shift of the royal capital from [[Urasoe]] to Shuri remains somewhat unclear, architectural historian Matayoshi Shinzô notes that the [[1372]] Ming embassy seems to have been sent to Shuri (not Urasoe), and that the [[36 Min families]] who founded [[Kumemura]] in 1392 did so in Kume/Naha, and not at [[Makiminato]] near Urasoe, suggesting that Shuri was already the political center by that time.<ref>Matayoshi Shinzô 又吉真三, "Shurijô ha Ryûkyû kenchiku bunka no shûtaisei" 「首里城は琉球建築文化の集大成’, ''Shurijô fukugen charity tokubetsu kôen'' 首里城復元チャリティ特別公演 (Naha: Kudaka Shôkichi geinô kikaku 久高将吉芸能企画, 1987), 104-105.</ref>
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In any case, Shuri was definitively the primary royal palace by [[1427]], during the reign of [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]] (r. 1422-1439), first king of the united Kingdom of Ryûkyû. That the castle was extant at that time is confirmed by the inscription on the [[Ankoku-zan jukaboku stele]], the oldest example of Okinawan writing surviving today, erected there in 1427.<ref>Matayoshi, 105.; "[http://ryukyushimpo.jp/news/storyid-40170-storytopic-121.html Ankokuzan jukaboku no kihi]," Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia, Ryukyu Shimpo, 1 March 2003.</ref> The stele also relates that [[Kaiki]] (Huái Jī), a prominent Chinese-born official in service to [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]], oversaw the landscaping of the castle grounds in accordance with ''[[feng shui]]'' / geomantic beliefs and traditions. After traveling to China in [[1417]] and coming back to Ryûkyû, Kaiki directed the construction of the [[Ryutan|Ryûtan]] pond below the castle, the planting of flowering trees around the pond, and the construction of an artificial hill to the west of the castle.<ref name=maritime93>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 93-94.</ref>
    
Succession disputes which broke out following the death of King [[Sho Kinpuku|Shô Kinpuku]] in [[1453]] led to the destruction of the palace buildings at that time, and the loss of many artifacts including silver seals granted the kings of Ryûkyû by the Hongwu Emperor as signs of authority<ref>Kerr. p97.</ref>. The castle was rebuilt shortly afterward.
 
Succession disputes which broke out following the death of King [[Sho Kinpuku|Shô Kinpuku]] in [[1453]] led to the destruction of the palace buildings at that time, and the loss of many artifacts including silver seals granted the kings of Ryûkyû by the Hongwu Emperor as signs of authority<ref>Kerr. p97.</ref>. The castle was rebuilt shortly afterward.
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