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Chūzan (中山) was one of
three kingdoms which controlled Okinawa in the 14th century. Okinawa,
previously controlled by a
number of
local chieftains or lords...
- has
original text
related to this article: 琉球國中山世鑑
Chūzan Seikan (中山世鑑, lit.
Reflections on
Chūzan),
compiled in 1650 by Shō Shōken, is the
first official...
- were
unified into
three prin****lities:
Hokuzan (北山,
Northern Mountain),
Chūzan (中山,
Central Mountain), and
Nanzan (南山,
Southern Mountain). This was known...
- King of Lew Chew, King of
Chūzan (中山王,
Chūzan-ō), or more
officially Ryūkyū Kingdom's King of
Chūzan (琉球国中山王, Ryūkyū-koku
Chūzan-ō), was a
title held by...
-
lines of kings,
namely Sanhoku (山北, lit. 'north of the
mountain (island)'),
Chūzan (中山, lit. 'middle
mountain (island)') and
Sannan (山南, lit. 'south of the...
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Wikisource has
original text
related to this article: 中山世譜
Chūzan Seifu (中山世譜, lit.
Genealogy book of
Chūzan) was an
official history of the Ryūkyū
Kingdom compiled...
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period thus began, and
would end
roughly one
hundred years later, when
Chūzan's King Shō
Hashi conquered Hokuzan in 1416 and
Nanzan in 1429.
After the...
- Shō
Hashi (1372 – 1439) was a king of
Chūzan, one of
three tributary states to
China on the
western Pacific island of Okinawa. He is
traditionally described...
- the
Second Shō
family (第二尚氏,
daini Shō-shi)
under the
title of King of
Chūzan. This
family took the
family name from the
earlier rulers of the kingdom...
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Haneji Chōshū's
Chūzan Seikan (1650),
which was
followed by Sai Taku's
edition of the
Chūzan Seifu (1701) and Sai On's
edition of the
Chūzan Seifu (1725)...