− | He served as ''gohyôgu atai hissha'' (secretary of equipping soldiers) from [[1856]] to [[1858]], and was then appointed ''ukaiya mui'', a post within the ''[[zaiban bugyo|zaiban bugyôsho]]'' (office of the [[Satsuma han]] resident officials in [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû]]), in 1858. Later that same year, his father [[Bai Iki]] died, and Ien inherited his position as ''[[jito (Ryukyu)|jitô]]'' of [[Henoko]] in Kushi ''[[magiri]]'', and title of Takasato ''peechin''. Ien was later named ''jitô'' of Fukuji in Kyan ''magiri'', with the title of Fukuji ''peechin''.
| + | The second son of sixth family head [[Bai Iki]], he served as ''gohyôgu atai hissha'' (secretary of equipping soldiers) from [[1856]] to [[1858]], and was then appointed ''ukaiya mui'', a post within the ''[[zaiban bugyo|zaiban bugyôsho]]'' (office of the [[Satsuma han]] resident officials in [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû]]), in 1858. Later that same year, his father died, and Ien inherited his position as ''[[jito (Ryukyu)|jitô]]'' of [[Henoko]] in Kushi ''[[magiri]]'', and title of Takasato ''peechin''. Ien was later named ''jitô'' of Fukuji in Kyan ''magiri'', with the title of Fukuji ''peechin''. |
| Ien was named ''satôza ôyako'' (deputy head of the Sugar Guild) in [[1862]], and also served for a time as head of the [[Omonogusuku]], the highest position a Naha scholar-bureaucrat could aspire to. | | Ien was named ''satôza ôyako'' (deputy head of the Sugar Guild) in [[1862]], and also served for a time as head of the [[Omonogusuku]], the highest position a Naha scholar-bureaucrat could aspire to. |