Sulfur

From SamuraiWiki
Revision as of 21:58, 29 October 2019 by LordAmeth (talk | contribs) (Created page with "*''Other Names: sulphur'' *''Japanese'': 硫黄 ''(iou)'' Sulfur is a yellow mineral essential to the production of gunpowder. One of the chief sources of sulfur histori...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
  • Other Names: sulphur
  • Japanese: 硫黄 (iou)

Sulfur is a yellow mineral essential to the production of gunpowder.

One of the chief sources of sulfur historically in the region around Japan was the island of Iô Torishima, located in the Amami Islands to the south of Kyushu and controlled by the Ryûkyû Kingdom throughout the Edo period. China imported sulfur from the kingdom as well as from other sources, but forbade the export of the material.[1] This made trade relations with (or control of) Ryûkyû vital for military preparedness, and powers throughout the region regularly worked to secure or maintain sources of Ryûkyûan sulfur. Ryûkyû often traded sulfur to entities in Japan, Korea, and China, or presented it as tax or tribute;[2] in trade with Southeast Asia, however, Ryûkyû only ever shipped sulfur to Siam, and not to other polities.[3] Japanese entities such as the Heian court and Muromachi shogunate exported a portion of the Ryûkyûan sulfur they obtained, in sizable enough amounts that sulfur is noted as one of the chief exports of premodern Japan.<ref>Richard von Glahn, "The Ningbo-Hakata Merchant Network and the Reorientation of East Asian Maritime Trade, 1150-1350," Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 74:2 (2014), 268-269.; Asato Susumu 安里進, Dana Masayuki 田名真之, et al. (eds.), Okinawa ken no rekishi 沖縄県の歴史, Tokyo: Yamakawa shuppan (2010), 117.<ref>

References

  1. Uezato Takashi 上里隆史. "Ryûkyû no kaki ni tsuite" (琉球の火器, "The fireweapons in the Ryukyus"). Okinawa Bunka 沖縄文化. vol. 36:1, no. 91 (July 2000), 77.
  2. In fact, along with tin and copper, sulfur was one of the chief tribute goods presented by Ryûkyûan tributary missions to China.
  3. Geoffrey Gunn, History Without Borders: The Making of an Asian World Region, 1000-1800, Hong Kong University Press (2011), 220-221.