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*''Japanese'': [[尚]] 裕 ''(Shou Hiroshi)''
 
*''Japanese'': [[尚]] 裕 ''(Shou Hiroshi)''
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Shô Hiroshi was a great-grandson of [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]], the last king of the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]], and was head of the [[Sho dynasty|Shô family]] for most of his life, following the death in 1923 of his father, [[Sho Sho|Shô Shô]].
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Shô Hiroshi was a great-grandson of [[Sho Tai|Shô Tai]], the last king of the [[Ryukyu Kingdom|Ryûkyû Kingdom]], and was head of the [[Sho dynasty|Shô family]] for most of his life, following the death in 1923 of his father, [[Sho Sho|Shô Shô]]. He inherited the title of Marquis (''[[kazoku|kôshaku]]'') upon his father's death.
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In 1926, he sold the family's mansion in the Kudan neighborhood to Tokyo City, and relocated the family to a new residence in the Nanpeidai area of Shibuya.<ref>Hokama Masaaki 外間政明, "Shôke no takaramono ni tsuite" 「尚家の宝物について」, RYUKYU exhibition catalog, Tokyo National Museum (2022), 439.</ref>
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In 1926, he sold the family's mansion in the Kudan neighborhood to Tokyo City, and relocated the family to a new residence in the Nanpeidai area of Shibuya. The family also maintained secondary homes (''bessô'') in [[Kamakura]] and in Chôjamachi, [[Chiba prefecture]], through the war.
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In the postwar period, Shô Hiroshi played a key role in keeping and sharing the Shô family's treasures; a large collection of historical documents held today by the [[University of Tokyo]] [[Shiryohensanjo|Historiographical Institute]] related to the Shô family and former Ryukyuan royal court are labeled as being from Shô Hiroshi's collection.
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Hiroshi later attended and graduated from [[Tokyo University|Tokyo Imperial University]] and served as a lieutenant in the Imperial Japanese Navy.
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Around 1960, the Shô family relocated its main residence from Nanpeidai to Tamagawa Seta in Tokyo's Setagaya Ward, and then in 1971 to the Aoyama neighborhood near Shibuya. Though the family maintained stewards at its Nanpeidai residence, since the move to Tamagawa Seta, they stopped doing so.
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In the postwar period, Shô Hiroshi played a key role in keeping and sharing the Shô family's treasures. Hiroshi gifted some 74 art objects to the [[Tokyo National Museum]] in 1969, and a large collection of historical documents held today by the [[University of Tokyo]] [[Shiryohensanjo|Historiographical Institute]] related to the Shô family and former Ryukyuan royal court are labeled as being from Shô Hiroshi's collection.
    
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==References==
 
==References==
 
*Gallery labels, Naha City Museum of History.
 
*Gallery labels, Naha City Museum of History.
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*Hokama Masaaki 外間政明, "Shôke no takaramono ni tsuite" 「尚家の宝物について」, RYUKYU exhibition catalog, Tokyo National Museum (2022), 439-440.
 
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[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Ryukyu]]
 
[[Category:Other Historical Figures]]
 
[[Category:Other Historical Figures]]
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