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Thus, up until around 1600, Shingon and [[Rinzai]] Zen were very much the dominant - if not the only - schools of Buddhism active in Ryûkyû. The heads of Ryukyuan Buddhist temples were all Japanese up until the late 15th or early 16th century, when Ryukyuan monks began to rise to become the heads of some of these temples; even these Ryukyuan monks, however, trained for a considerable amount of time at temples in Japan prior to rising to such positions of authority.<ref name=smits193>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 193.</ref> Zen monks based in Ryûkyû, due to their strong connections to Japan (chiefly [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Suo province|Suô provinces]] and the ''[[Kyoto Gozan]]'' temples),<ref name=smits193/> came to occupy a particularly prominent role in Ryûkyû's diplomatic interactions with Japan, both in drafting formal communications, and in serving as official royal envoys. Interactions with China, Korea, and Southeast Asia continued to be handled chiefly by the [[scholar-aristocracy of Ryukyu|scholar-officials]] of [[Kumemura]], however.<ref name=yoko38/>
 
Thus, up until around 1600, Shingon and [[Rinzai]] Zen were very much the dominant - if not the only - schools of Buddhism active in Ryûkyû. The heads of Ryukyuan Buddhist temples were all Japanese up until the late 15th or early 16th century, when Ryukyuan monks began to rise to become the heads of some of these temples; even these Ryukyuan monks, however, trained for a considerable amount of time at temples in Japan prior to rising to such positions of authority.<ref name=smits193>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii Press (2019), 193.</ref> Zen monks based in Ryûkyû, due to their strong connections to Japan (chiefly [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Suo province|Suô provinces]] and the ''[[Kyoto Gozan]]'' temples),<ref name=smits193/> came to occupy a particularly prominent role in Ryûkyû's diplomatic interactions with Japan, both in drafting formal communications, and in serving as official royal envoys. Interactions with China, Korea, and Southeast Asia continued to be handled chiefly by the [[scholar-aristocracy of Ryukyu|scholar-officials]] of [[Kumemura]], however.<ref name=yoko38/>
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At least up until c. 1600, though Buddhism came to play a prominent role in supporting or otherwise being associated with the royal court, it was not at all widespread as a popular religion for individual, personal, practice or belief.<ref>Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', 194.</ref>
    
[[Pure Land Buddhism]] (''Jôdo shû'') was first introduced to Ryûkyû by the Japanese monk [[Taichu|Taichû]], who sojourned in Ryûkyû in [[1603]]-[[1605]].<ref>"[http://ryukyushimpo.jp/news/storyid-41954-storytopic-121.html Taichû]," ''Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia'' 沖縄コンパクト事典, Ryukyu Shimpo, 1 March 2003.</ref> By this time, there were some 46 temples active in Ryûkyû, associated with at least twenty different deities.<ref>Of these, roughly 17 were established before the reign of Shô Shin, 24 during the reigns of Shô Shin and [[Sho Sei (尚清)|Shô Sei]], and one later. Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', 141-142.</ref>
 
[[Pure Land Buddhism]] (''Jôdo shû'') was first introduced to Ryûkyû by the Japanese monk [[Taichu|Taichû]], who sojourned in Ryûkyû in [[1603]]-[[1605]].<ref>"[http://ryukyushimpo.jp/news/storyid-41954-storytopic-121.html Taichû]," ''Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia'' 沖縄コンパクト事典, Ryukyu Shimpo, 1 March 2003.</ref> By this time, there were some 46 temples active in Ryûkyû, associated with at least twenty different deities.<ref>Of these, roughly 17 were established before the reign of Shô Shin, 24 during the reigns of Shô Shin and [[Sho Sei (尚清)|Shô Sei]], and one later. Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', 141-142.</ref>
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