Shō Ten

Japanese politician
Marquess
Shō Ten
尚典
Marquess Shō Ten
Crown Prince of Ryukyu
In office
1868–1879
MonarchShō Tai
Member of House of Peers
In office
31 August 1901 – 20 September 1920
MonarchsMeiji
Taishō
Preceded byShō Tai
Succeeded byShō Shō
Personal details
Born
Umitukugani (思徳金)

(1864-09-02)2 September 1864
Shuri, Ryukyu Kingdom
Died20 September 1920(1920-09-20) (aged 56)
Shuri, Okinawa, Empire of Japan
Resting placeTamaudun
Spouse(s)Shōko, Nodake Aji-ganashi
ChildrenNakijin Nobuko, Shō Shō, Shō Kei, Shō Dan, Shō Bu
Parents
  • Shō Tai (father)
  • Omomatsurugane, Sashiki Aji-ganashi (mother)
Yamato
name
Chōku (朝弘)
RankWōji

Marquess Shō Ten (尚典, 2 September 1864 – 20 September 1920) was the last crown prince of the Ryukyu Kingdom (中城王子, Nakagusuku Ōji, lit. Prince of Nakagusuku). He lost that title upon the abolition of the kingdom and the forced abdication of the king, his father, Shō Tai, in 1879, and later succeeded to the title of Marquess (侯爵, kōshaku) in the kazoku peerage following his father's death in 1901.

Life

Funeral of Marquess Shō Ten

Shō Ten was born in Shuri and was from birth crown prince to the Ryukyu Kingdom. He underwent his coming-of-age ceremony in 1878 and was married the same year. In March 1879, his father Shō Tai formally abdicated upon the orders of the Meiji government, which abolished the kingdom, transforming Ryukyu domain into Okinawa Prefecture, with officials appointed from Tokyo to administer the islands.[1] The former king was ordered to report to Tokyo, but feigning illness, he temporarily found shelter at his son's palace. Shō was then sent to Tokyo as a hostage and partial appeasement as Ryūkyūan officials searched for ways to delay the former king's departure.[2]

Following his father's death and his succession as Marquess and head of the Shō family in 1901, Shō and his family gave up the trappings of traditional Ryukyuan royal court life, costume, court language, and ritual, and adopted those of the Japanese peerage. As Marquess, Shō held a hereditary seat in the House of Peers in the Imperial Diet. He was joined in representing Okinawa by a Japanese resident appointed to represent the prefecture's wealthiest taxpayers for the first time in 1918.[3]

Shō died on 20 September 1920, in his mansion in Shuri and was entombed six days later in Tamaudun, the royal mausoleum near Shuri Castle, in accordance with traditional Ryukyuan royal funerary rites. He would be the last member of the Shō family to be honored in such a manner.[4]

Family

The family head was succeeded by his eldest son Shō Shō, then by Hiroshi Shō and the current incumbent, Mamoru Shō.

  • Father: Shō Tai
  • Mother: Omomatsurugane, Sashiki Aji-ganashi
  • Wife: Shoko, Nodake Aji-ganashi
  • Children:
    • Shō Shō (b.1888)
    • Nobuko (b. ?) engaged to Nakijin Chōei
    • Sho Kei (b.1889)
    • Sho Dan (b.1890)
    • Sho Bu (b.1899)

References

  1. ^ Kerr. p381.
  2. ^ Keane, Donald (2005). Emperor Of Japan: Meiji And His World, 1852–1912. Columbia University Press. pp. 305–307. ISBN 0-231-12341-8.
  3. ^ Kerr, George H. Okinawa: The History of an Island People. (revised ed.) Tokyo: Tuttle Publishing, 2003. p428.
  4. ^ Kerr. p453.
Titles of nobility
Preceded by Marquess
1901–1920
Succeeded by
Titles in pretence
Preceded by — TITULAR —
Shō family head
1901–1920
Succeeded by