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Created page with "*''Born: 1881'' *''Died: 1963'' *''Japanese'': 東恩納寛惇 ''(Higaonna Kanjun)'' Higaonna Kanjun was one of the pioneers of the field of Okinawan Studies. Higaon..."
*''Born: [[1881]]''
*''Died: 1963''
*''Japanese'': [[東恩納]]寛惇 ''(Higaonna Kanjun)''

Higaonna Kanjun was one of the pioneers of the field of Okinawan Studies.

Higaonna was born in the Higashi-machi district of [[Naha]], in [[1881]], in a house which formerly served as residence for samurai officials associated with the ''[[zaiban bugyo|Satsuma zaiban bugyôsho]]''.<ref>From 1900 until its destruction in 1945, the house was home to the Namikawa Hardware Store.</ref> His family was Naha aristocracy, of the Shin (慎) lineage. Higaonna attended Okinawa Jinjô Middle School, and then the Fifth Kumamoto High School<ref>Which, incidentally, later became Kumamoto University.</ref>, before going on to university in the history department of [[University of Tokyo|Tokyo Imperial University]]. He graduated in [[1908]], and remained in Tokyo, becoming a teacher at Tokyo's First Prefectural Middle School in 1919. He was then hired in 1929 to teach at Tokyo Prefectural High School. In 1933, Higaonna was dispatched from Tokyo to travel around India and Southeast Asia; while in Thailand, he participated in research on the ''[[Nihonmachi]]'' (Japantown) in [[Ayutthaya]].

Higaonna became a professor at [[Takushoku University]] in Tokyo in 1949. While there, he published numerous scholarly essays in the ''[[Ryukyu Shimpo|Ryûkyû Shimpô]]'' newspaper and other magazines, and rose to prominence in the field of Okinawan Studies. Some of his most important works include ''Shô Tai kô jitsuroku'' ("True Record of Lord [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]]," 1924), ''Reimeiki no kaigai kôtsûshi'' ("History of Overseas Transport of the Dawning of a New Era," 1941), ''Tai Biruma Indo'' ("Thailand, Burma, India," 1941), and ''Nantô fudoki'' (1950).

He was a proponent of the idea that Okinawa was the only place where a purer traditional Japanese-like culture still survived, as Japan modernized, and that the [[Okinawan language]] retained more features of ancient Japanese than did any (mainland) Japanese dialect.<ref>Yokoyama Manabu 横山学, ''Ryûkyû koku shisetsu torai no kenkyû'' 琉球国使節渡来の研究, Tokyo: Yoshikawa kôbunkan (1987), 11-13.</ref>

Higaonna also took prominent part in a number of the other core debates in Okinawan Studies. One such debate concerned references to ''Liuqiu'' (流求, "Ryûkyû") in the 7th century ''[[Book of Sui]]''. While some scholars, including [[Ifa Fuyu|Ifa Fuyû]], contended that the ''Book'' referred to the [[Ryukyu Islands]] themselves, others asserted that this was a reference, rather, to the island of [[Taiwan]]; Higaonna wrote that the first mention of ''Liuqiu'' in the ''Book of Sui'' referred properly to Ryûkyû, and can thus be counted as the earliest reference to Ryûkyû in any extent document, but that later mentions referred to Taiwan.<ref>Yokoyama, 8-11.</ref>

Higaonna died in Tokyo in 1963 at the age of 83. His extensive collection of books and documents, acquired over a 60-year career, was donated to the Okinawa Prefectural Library, where it continues to be maintained as the ''Higaonna Bunko'' ("Higaonna Collection").

==References==
*Plaque at former site of Higaonna's childhood home, Naha.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/21887987031/sizes/k/]
<references/>

[[Category:Historians]]
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
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