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''Born: [[1823]]''
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*''Born: [[1823]]''
''Died: [[1876]]''
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*''Died: [[1876]]''
''Titles: [[Ginowan]] [[ueekata]]'' (宜野湾親方)'', Giwan ueekata'' (宜湾親方)
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*''Titles: [[Ginowan]] [[ueekata]]'' (宜野湾親方)'', Giwan ueekata'' (宜湾親方)
''Other Names: Shô Yûkô'' (向有恒)
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*''Other Names: Shô Yûkô'' (向有恒)
''Japanese/Okinawan'': 宜湾朝保 ''(Giwan Chouho)''
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*''Japanese/Okinawan'': 宜湾朝保 ''(Giwan Chouho)''
    
Shô Yûkô Ginowan ueekata Chôho<ref>It was typical at this time for Ryukyuan aristocrat-bureaucrats to have multiple names. Shô Yûkô is a Chinese-style name, used in Chinese-language correspondence. "Ginowan ueekata" is not a name, but a title, which might be roughly translated as "Lord of [[Ginowan]]." Finally, Chôho is a Japanese style given name, used in combination with the title "Ginowan ueekata" in Japanese-language correspondence.</ref>, also known more simply as Giwan Chôho, was a [[Kingdom of Ryukyu|Rykyuan]] government official and emissary; at the time of the [[Meiji Restoration]] in Japan, he was a member of the ''[[Sanshikan]]'', the Council of Three top government ministers in the Kingdom of Ryûkyû.
 
Shô Yûkô Ginowan ueekata Chôho<ref>It was typical at this time for Ryukyuan aristocrat-bureaucrats to have multiple names. Shô Yûkô is a Chinese-style name, used in Chinese-language correspondence. "Ginowan ueekata" is not a name, but a title, which might be roughly translated as "Lord of [[Ginowan]]." Finally, Chôho is a Japanese style given name, used in combination with the title "Ginowan ueekata" in Japanese-language correspondence.</ref>, also known more simply as Giwan Chôho, was a [[Kingdom of Ryukyu|Rykyuan]] government official and emissary; at the time of the [[Meiji Restoration]] in Japan, he was a member of the ''[[Sanshikan]]'', the Council of Three top government ministers in the Kingdom of Ryûkyû.
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