Difference between revisions of "Oshima hikki"

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(Created page with "*''Japanese'': 大島筆記 ''(Ooshima hikki)'' ''Ôshima hikki'' is an account of a shipwrecked Okinawan individual drifting ashore on Amami Ôshima. {{stu...")
 
 
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*''Date: [[1762]], [[Tobe Yoshihiro]]''
 
*''Japanese'': 大島筆記 ''(Ooshima hikki)''
 
*''Japanese'': 大島筆記 ''(Ooshima hikki)''
  
''Ôshima hikki'' is an account of a shipwrecked Okinawan individual drifting ashore on [[Amami Oshima|Amami Ôshima]].
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''Ôshima hikki'' is an account of a number of Ryukyuan officials drifting ashore on the island of Ôshima in [[Tosa province]] in [[1762]]. The Ryukyuans were led by a [[Shiohira Peechin]], whose exchanges with a Tosa-based Confucian scholar named [[Tobe Yoshihiro]] are also recorded in the account.
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The volume includes descriptions of China, and roughly 60 ''[[ryuka|ryûka]]'' (Ryukyuan poems), along with other content.
  
 
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}
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==See Also==
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*"[http://ir.lib.u-ryukyu.ac.jp:8080/handle/123456789/10244 Ôshima hikki at University of Ryukyus Repository]." PDF scans of manuscript copy of the Ôshima hikki, from the university's [[Iha Fuyu]] Collection.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
*[[Yokoyama Manabu]], presentation at "[http://www.hawaii.edu/asiaref/japan/event2013/Index.htm#symposium Interpreting Parades and Processions of Edo Japan]" symposium, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 11 Feb 2013.
 
*[[Yokoyama Manabu]], presentation at "[http://www.hawaii.edu/asiaref/japan/event2013/Index.htm#symposium Interpreting Parades and Processions of Edo Japan]" symposium, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 11 Feb 2013.
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*"[http://jairo.nii.ac.jp/0048/00004242 Ôshima hikki]." JAIRO.
  
 
[[Category:Edo Period]]
 
[[Category:Edo Period]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Historical Documents]]
 
[[Category:Historical Documents]]

Latest revision as of 13:01, 10 April 2013

Ôshima hikki is an account of a number of Ryukyuan officials drifting ashore on the island of Ôshima in Tosa province in 1762. The Ryukyuans were led by a Shiohira Peechin, whose exchanges with a Tosa-based Confucian scholar named Tobe Yoshihiro are also recorded in the account.

The volume includes descriptions of China, and roughly 60 ryûka (Ryukyuan poems), along with other content.

See Also

References