Difference between revisions of "Tamaudun"
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[[Image:Tamaudun.jpg|right|thumb|400px|The main building at Tamaudun.]] | [[Image:Tamaudun.jpg|right|thumb|400px|The main building at Tamaudun.]] | ||
+ | *''Established: [[1501]]'' | ||
*''Japanese'': 玉陵 ''(Tamaudun)'' | *''Japanese'': 玉陵 ''(Tamaudun)'' | ||
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Crown Prince [[Sho Ten|Shô Ten]] was the last person to be entombed in Tamaudun. His funeral was held September 26, 1920.<ref>Kerr, George. ''Okinawa: The History of an Island People''. Revised Edition. Tuttle Publishing, 2000. p109n.</ref> | Crown Prince [[Sho Ten|Shô Ten]] was the last person to be entombed in Tamaudun. His funeral was held September 26, 1920.<ref>Kerr, George. ''Okinawa: The History of an Island People''. Revised Edition. Tuttle Publishing, 2000. p109n.</ref> | ||
− | The compound took considerable damage in the 1945 battle of Okinawa, but survived mostly intact. The structure survives today, though the stone has been significantly blackened, not primarily by the bombing, but simply by age. Today, a visitor center near the entrance to the compound includes a small permanent exhibit gallery with models of the mausoleum, describing its history and layout. | + | The compound took considerable damage in the 1945 battle of Okinawa, but survived mostly intact, and underwent repairs in 1977. The structure survives today, though the stone has been significantly blackened, not primarily by the bombing, but simply by age. Today, a visitor center near the entrance to the compound includes a small permanent exhibit gallery with models of the mausoleum, describing its history and layout. |
==Individuals Interred<ref>Nakamura Toru. "[http://gusuku.que.jp/isan/7_tamaudun/ichiran.html 被葬者一覧]." ''Okinawa no sekai isan'' 沖縄の世界遺産. 2005.</ref>== | ==Individuals Interred<ref>Nakamura Toru. "[http://gusuku.que.jp/isan/7_tamaudun/ichiran.html 被葬者一覧]." ''Okinawa no sekai isan'' 沖縄の世界遺産. 2005.</ref>== |
Revision as of 01:22, 1 June 2015
- Established: 1501
- Japanese: 玉陵 (Tamaudun)
Tamaudun is the royal mausoleum of the Ryûkyû Kingdom. It was originally built in 1501 by King Shô Shin to house the remains of his father, King Shô En. The mausoleum's name was originally written with different characters, 魂殿, meaning "palace of the spirits."
The mausoleum is located a short distance to the west of Shuri castle, and has been designated a National Cultural Property and Historical Site,[1] as well as being included alongside Shuri and other gusuku (Okinawan castles) in the 'Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu' World Heritage Site.[2] The compound consists of three chambers in one large stone building carved directly into the limestone bedrock, and topped with stone guardian statues. Access to the main building is through a pair of courtyards, each defined by rough limestone walls, and each with a single gate in a distinctive Okinawan style. A stele in the outer courtyard, erected at the time of the mausoleum's construction, states the provisions for being entombed at Tamaudun, and lists nine names, including that of Shô Shin.
The kings and queens of the Ryûkyû Kingdom are entombed in the eastern chamber, along with a number of crown princes and princesses. Other members of the royal family are entombed in the western chamber, while the central chamber was not intended for permanent entombment, though a single funerary urn containing an unidentified individual's remains does remain there. Rather, the central chamber was used for the senkotsu ritual. As in traditional Okinawan commoners' funerary ritual, after death a body was placed in the central chamber until all that remained was bones; the bones were then ritually washed, and placed in a funerary urn which would then be entombed permanently in the western or eastern chamber.
Following Tamaudun's completion, Shô En's remains were moved there from a site called Miagemori (見上森), where he had been originally entombed. Every King of Ryûkyû from Shô En onwards is entombed at Tamaudun, with one exception. Shô Nei (r. 1587-1620) requested to be buried elsewhere, allegedly because he felt he had dishonored his ancestors by allowing Ryûkyû to fall to Japanese invasion in 1609. Shô Nei was instead entombed at Urasoe yôdore alongside Eiso and two other 13th-14th century kings of Okinawa.
Crown Prince Shô Ten was the last person to be entombed in Tamaudun. His funeral was held September 26, 1920.[3]
The compound took considerable damage in the 1945 battle of Okinawa, but survived mostly intact, and underwent repairs in 1977. The structure survives today, though the stone has been significantly blackened, not primarily by the bombing, but simply by age. Today, a visitor center near the entrance to the compound includes a small permanent exhibit gallery with models of the mausoleum, describing its history and layout.
Individuals Interred[4]
East Chamber | West Chamber |
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References
- Plaques and museum displays on-site.
- ↑ Kadekawa Manabu 嘉手川学 (ed.). Okinawa Chanpurû jiten 沖縄チャンプルー事典. Yamakei Publishers, 2001. p56.
- ↑ "Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu." UNESCO World Heritage Sites official website. 2012.
- ↑ Kerr, George. Okinawa: The History of an Island People. Revised Edition. Tuttle Publishing, 2000. p109n.
- ↑ Nakamura Toru. "被葬者一覧." Okinawa no sekai isan 沖縄の世界遺産. 2005.
- ↑ Dates given are birth & death dates, not reign years.
- ↑ The names of some of these figures are unknown. This figure was the wife or consort (ganashi) of the lord (anji) of a place called Aoriya.