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==History==
 
==History==
The shamisen is believed to have first emerged in Japan in the late 16th century, being developed out of the snakeskin ''[[sanshin]]'' introduced to Japan from [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Okinawa]] at that time; the ''sanshin'' derived, in turn, from the Chinese ''sanxian'', likely introduced into Okinawa in the late 14th century. The Okinawan ''sanshin'' is believed to have been introduced to the Japanese port of [[Sakai]] (near [[Osaka]]) sometime around [[1558]]-[[1567]]; the Japanese form of the instrument developed and spread quickly, spreading throughout Japan by around [[1595]].<ref>Andrew Tsubaki, "The Performing Arts of Sixteenth-Century Japan: A Prelude to Kabuki," ''Educational Theatre Journal'' 29:3 (1977), 304.</ref>
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The shamisen is believed to have first emerged in Japan in the late 16th century, being developed out of the snakeskin ''[[sanshin]]'' introduced to Japan from [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Okinawa]] at that time; the ''sanshin'' derived, in turn, from the Chinese ''[[sanxian]]'', likely introduced into Okinawa in the late 14th century. The Okinawan ''sanshin'' is believed to have been introduced to the Japanese port of [[Sakai]] (near [[Osaka]]) sometime around [[1558]]-[[1567]]; the Japanese form of the instrument developed and spread quickly, spreading throughout Japan by around [[1595]].<ref>Andrew Tsubaki, "The Performing Arts of Sixteenth-Century Japan: A Prelude to Kabuki," ''Educational Theatre Journal'' 29:3 (1977), 304.</ref>
    
Following its appearance, the shamisen quickly became incorporated into a variety of popular entertainment modes and traditions, eventually being adopted into the kabuki and puppet theatres, and geisha and courtesan teahouses, though it was never adopted into more elite contexts such as the [[Noh]] theatre. Some of the earliest genres that made use of the shamisen include ''jiuta'' and ''kouta'' (parlor songs often accompanying dances), ''zokkyoku'' (one of the chief styles of geisha music), and the ''sekkyô-bushi'' and ''[[joruri|jôruri]]'' storytelling modes. The ''ningyô jôruri'' puppet theater incorporated the shamisen from the very beginning, around the year [[1600]], developing its own distinctive genre (''[[gidayu-bushi|gidayû-bushi]]'') and indeed its own distinctive style of instrument (the [[gidayu shamisen|gidayû shamisen]]) by the early 18th century. Meanwhile, though it has been suggested that the shamisen was not initially incorporated into ''onna kabuki'' (women's kabuki) in the early 17th century, it became the central musical instrument in kabuki by the 1650s.<ref>Tsubaki, 304-305.</ref>
 
Following its appearance, the shamisen quickly became incorporated into a variety of popular entertainment modes and traditions, eventually being adopted into the kabuki and puppet theatres, and geisha and courtesan teahouses, though it was never adopted into more elite contexts such as the [[Noh]] theatre. Some of the earliest genres that made use of the shamisen include ''jiuta'' and ''kouta'' (parlor songs often accompanying dances), ''zokkyoku'' (one of the chief styles of geisha music), and the ''sekkyô-bushi'' and ''[[joruri|jôruri]]'' storytelling modes. The ''ningyô jôruri'' puppet theater incorporated the shamisen from the very beginning, around the year [[1600]], developing its own distinctive genre (''[[gidayu-bushi|gidayû-bushi]]'') and indeed its own distinctive style of instrument (the [[gidayu shamisen|gidayû shamisen]]) by the early 18th century. Meanwhile, though it has been suggested that the shamisen was not initially incorporated into ''onna kabuki'' (women's kabuki) in the early 17th century, it became the central musical instrument in kabuki by the 1650s.<ref>Tsubaki, 304-305.</ref>
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