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Tamagusuku (玉城村,
Tamagusuku-son) was a
village located in
Shimajiri District,
Okinawa Prefecture, ****an. As of 2003, the
village had an
estimated po****tion...
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Tamagusuku (玉城, 1296–April 22, 1336) was a
legendary local ruler of
Okinawa Island.
According to Ryukyu's
official history,
Okinawa was
split into three...
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Tamagusuku U****ata Chōkun (玉城 親方 朝薫,
September 11, 1684 –
March 1, 1734), also
known by the Chinese-style name Shō Juyū (向 受祐), was a Ryūkyūan aristocrat-bureaucrat...
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Tamagusuku Castle (玉城城,
Tamagusuku jō, Okinawan: Tamagushiku) is a
Ryukyuan gusuku in Nanjō, Okinawa. It is the
oldest castle on Okinawa; Chūzan Seikan...
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merger of the town of Sashiki, and the
villages of Chinen, Ōzato and
Tamagusuku (all from
Shimajiri District). Nanjō has an area of 49.94 km² and, on...
- government, and
those of many
other states in the region.[citation needed]
Tamagusuku succeeded his
father Eiji as king of
Okinawa at the age of nineteen, in...
- Ueno) Nago Naha (capital) Nanjō (Formerly Sashiki, Chinen, Ōzato, and
Tamagusuku)
Okinawa Tomigusuku Urasoe Uruma (Formerly Gushikawa, Ishikawa, Katsuren...
- (warabe-na/warabi-naa, 童名) were
personal names. For example, the warabi-naa of
Tamagusuku Chōkun was Umi-guraa (思五良). Warabi-naa were most
prevalent among Okinawans...
- Ōzato,
along with the town of Sashiki, and the
villages of
Chinen and
Tamagusuku (all from
Shimajiri District), was
merged to
create the city of Nanjō...
- as well as a Māori name. In the
Okinawan language,
Tamaki is read as
Tamagusuku,
Tamagushiku or Tamashiro.
Notable people with the name include: Denny...