| The structure and organization of government in the mature Ryûkyû Kingdom (from the 15th century onward) were largely a continuation of those from the previous century, when the Kingdom of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]] established such governmental structures based on Ming models. Over the course of the ensuing centuries, various reforms and adaptations were built atop this foundation. | | The structure and organization of government in the mature Ryûkyû Kingdom (from the 15th century onward) were largely a continuation of those from the previous century, when the Kingdom of [[Chuzan|Chûzan]] established such governmental structures based on Ming models. Over the course of the ensuing centuries, various reforms and adaptations were built atop this foundation. |
− | Initially, under Kings [[Sho Shisho|Shô Shishô]] and [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]] at the beginning of the 15th century, the top three officials were known as ''ôsô'' (王相, C: ''wáng xiāng'') or ''kokusô'' (国相, C: ''guó xiāng''), sometimes translated as "prime minister", and a pair of ''chôshi'' (長史, C: ''zhǎng shǐ'', "head officials") of the "left" and "right." The ''chôshi'' of the right also served as head of [[Kumemura]] (with the title Kumemura-okite) and oversaw the [[tribute]] trade.<ref>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii (2019), 111-112.</ref> | + | Initially, under Kings [[Sho Shisho|Shô Shishô]] and [[Sho Hashi|Shô Hashi]] at the beginning of the 15th century, the top three officials were known as ''ôsô'' (王相, C: ''wáng xiāng'') or ''kokusô'' (国相, C: ''guó xiāng''), sometimes translated as "prime minister", and a pair of ''chôshi'' (長史, C: ''zhǎng shǐ'', "head officials") of the "left" and "right." The ''chôshi'' of the right also served as head of [[Kumemura]] (with the title Kumemura-okite) and oversaw the [[tribute]] trade.<ref>Gregory Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', University of Hawaii (2019), 111-112.</ref> Though ostensibly serving under the king, these Chinese-born officials exercised considerable power, especially in the realm of coordinating Ryûkyû's trade and relations otherwise with the [[Ming dynasty]] and other foreign courts, and sometimes seem to have even acted on behalf of all of Okinawa, despite the [[Sanzan period|three kingdoms]] on the island being ostensibly distinct sovereign entities. As early as the 1450s, however, these Chinese-born officials were replaced as the most prominent and influential figures in kingdom governance by individuals presented as the younger brothers of the kings, and by scholar-officials from Kumemura; it was at this time that the [[Sanshikan]] (Council of Three, the top three royal advisors and administrators) and the bureaucratic hierarchy under them, began to come into form.<ref>Smits, ''Maritime Ryukyu'', 112-113.</ref> |
| Though the kingdom was [[invasion of Ryukyu|invaded]] by [[Satsuma han|Kagoshima domain]] in [[1609]] and made a vassal to the [[Shimazu clan]] of that domain, the royal government was allowed to continue intact, maintaining its structures, practices, and administrative authority in most areas, albeit subject at times to Satsuma requests or edicts. | | Though the kingdom was [[invasion of Ryukyu|invaded]] by [[Satsuma han|Kagoshima domain]] in [[1609]] and made a vassal to the [[Shimazu clan]] of that domain, the royal government was allowed to continue intact, maintaining its structures, practices, and administrative authority in most areas, albeit subject at times to Satsuma requests or edicts. |