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Shō Hashi

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Shō Hashi
King of Chūzan
Reign1422–1439
PredecessorShishō
SuccessorShō Chū
Born1372
possibly Sashiki, Higo Province, Japan
Died1439
Okinawa
Burial
Tenzan Ryō, Shuri
IssueSeven sons, including
HouseFirst Shō dynasty
FatherShishō

Shō Hashi (1372 – 1439) was a First Shō dynasty king of the Okinawan polity of Chūzan from 1422 until his death. He was the son of the Okinawan lord Shō Shishō. Modern scholarship has connected Shishō's potential father, Samekawa, to a family of Southern Court-affiliated seafarers from southwestern Kyushu, where Hashi was possibly born. Hashi became the lord of Sashiki Castle in southern Okinawa in 1392, becoming a noted military leader. In 1407, following a diplomatic incident between the Chūzan king Bunei and the Ming dynasty court, Shō Shishō took the throne, attributed by the Ryukyuan official histories to a coup d'état by Hashi to install his father as king.

Hashi himself became king of Chūzan following Shishō's death. He continued tributary and trade relations with the Ming, and embarked on military campaigns against the rival kingdoms of Sannan and Sanhoku. By 1430, he was the sole Ming tributary in Okinawa. He likely lacked territorial control over the island, limited to trade hegemony over the region within the Ming tribute system. He erected the earliest inscribed stele in Okinawa at Shuri Castle in 1427. He died in 1439 and was buried in a cave tomb near Shuri. His death began a period of rapid succession between his sons and grandsons, escalating into the Shiro–Furi Rebellion [jp] and eventually the kingship of Shō Taikyū.

Biography

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The official histories of the Ryukyu Kingdom date Shō Hashi's birth to 1372. Both the 1650 Chūzan Seikan and 1701 Chūzan Seifu list his father as Shō Shishō, of unknown ancestry. However, the 1725 revision of the Chūzan Seifu states that Shishō was the son of lord Samekawa of Iheya Island, citing the Irosetsuden, a collection of Ryukyuan legends.[1] Some modern scholars have argued that Samekawa and his family were initially Southern Court-affiliated seafarers (and possibly wokou pirates) from southwestern Kyushu, in the vicinity of Yatsushiro and the harbor of Sashiki (now part of Ashikita); they migrated to Okinawa during the waning years of the Nanboku-chō period in the late 14th century. If this theory and his traditional birth date of 1372 are correct, Hashi was likely born in or near Sashiki, Kyushu.[2][3]

Hashi became the lord of Sashiki in southern Okinawa in 1392, ruling from Sashiki Castle. He became a noted military leader, with the Kyūyō stating that he drilled a cavalry force while ruling from Sashiki.[4][5] In 1402, he conquered the gusuku of Shimasoe-Ōzato in a rebellion against its lord.[4]

Bunei, the king of Chūzan, had several men castrated and sent to serve as eunuchs in the court of the Yongle Emperor in 1406. The emperor reacted poorly to this, ordering them returned and stating that it was intolerable that innocent men should be subjected to such treatment. The following year, Ming records reported that Shō Shishō, ostensibly Bunei's son, had sent an envoy announcing Bunei's death and requesting recognition as the king of Chūzan. The Ryukyuan official histories state that Hashi had led a rebellion against the tyrannical Bunei around this time, conquered Shuri Castle, and installed his father Shishō as king, beginning the First Shō dynasty.[6] Shishō died in 1421, with Hashi succeeding him as king of Chūzan the following year.[7][8]

Reign

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The Chinese merchant-official Ō Mō served as kokusō (chief minister) for portions of the reigns of Shishō and Hashi, but due to his age petitioned the Ming court to return to China. During the latter period of Hashi's kingship (and the reigns of his successors), another Chinese merchant-official named Kaiki was appointed as chief minister. Kaiki oversaw the groundskeeping of Shuri castle and served both as a Taoist longevity adviser to Hashi and a diplomat to Chinese trade outposts in Southeast Asia. The Ming Veritable Records record these ministers as having been appointed by the Ming court to serve the kings of Chūzan; historian Gregory Smits described the sudden rise in Ming influence following the overthrow of Bunei and the rise of the First Shō dynasty as a "Chinese-sponsored coup with Shō Hashi as the beneficiary".[9][10]

The Chūzan Seikan details Shō Hashi's military campaigns. In response to an alleged scheme by the neighboring kingdom of Sanhoku (also known as Hokuzan) to conquer Shuri Castle, Hashi is said to have organized an army, appointing the aji of Urasoe, Goeku, and Yomitan as his generals. The army arrived at Nago Castle several days later and defeated the forces of Sanhoku.[11] The second son of Shō Shishō, potentially Hashi's brother, was installed as the governor of Sanhoku in 1422.[12]

By 1430, Hashi had emerged as the sole tributary of the Ming in Okinawa.[13] The official histories attribute this to Hashi's conquest of the rival trade kingdoms of Sannan and Sanhoku, although they differ on the order and specifics of Hashi's conquests. They claim that Hashi sent an envoy to the Ming court outlining his conquests and the unification of the island, but no record of such an envoy exists in Ming sources. Hashi's unification likely amounted to monopolization of connections with resident Chinese merchants, and unifying the loose confederations of nobles that comprised the Sanzan kingdoms. Rather than territorial states, the three kingdoms may have functioned as pure labels that various local nobles operated under to interface with the Ming tribute system.[14]

A black and white photo of a stele on a pedestal
The Ankokuzan Jukaboku no Kihi (安国山樹華木之記), erected by Sho Hashi in 1427

The official histories portray Hashi as both a spiritually and militarily gifted ruler, embodying archetypal leadership qualities.[15] He maintained a shrine to the deity Tsukishiro, a local form of Hachiman brought to Okinawa by Samekawa.[16] In 1427, Hashi erected the earliest inscribed stele extant in Okinawa, the Ankokuzan Jukaboku no Kihi (安国山樹華木之記), at the sacred grove of Sonohyan-utaki on the grounds of Shuri Castle. It notes the planting of trees and flowers on a nearby hill, the political hegemony of Chūzan, and its tributary relations with the Ming empire. The stele serves as a terminus post quem for the construction of the castle. Walls were likely built around Shuri during Hashi's reign, and the area surrounding the structure gradually became a walled castle town.[17] Historian Mitsugu Sakihara wrote that Satto and Hashi both played a major role in introducing iron agricultural tools from China and Japan.[18]

Death and succession

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Shō Hashi died in 1439 and was buried near Shuri at Tenzan Ryō, a manmade cave tomb with a walled front. The tomb and his sarcophagus was destroyed during World War II, leaving only the ornate stone platform, which remains in storage at Shuri.[19]

Hashi's death began a rapid succession of rulers. Shō Chū, his second son, took the throne, but died in 1444. Chū's son, Shō Shitatsu, had a similarly short reign and died without heir in 1449. Hashi's fifth son, Shō Kinpuku took the throne before also dying four years later. A disputed succession between Kinpuku's son Shiro and Hashi's sixth son, Furi erupted into the Shiro–Furi Rebellion [jp], resulting in the destruction of Shuri Castle and the deaths of both claimants.[20][21] The throne of Chūzan passed to Shō Taikyū. Royal genealogies alternatively describe him as the son of Kinpuku or the seventh son of Hashi, although he may have been unrelated to the other kings of the dynasty.[20][22]

References

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  1. ^ Smits 2024, p. 229.
  2. ^ Smits 2019, pp. 107–110.
  3. ^ Smits 2024, pp. 229–230.
  4. ^ a b Smits 2024, p. 230.
  5. ^ Smits 2019, p. 80.
  6. ^ Smits 2019, pp. 78–79, 111–112.
  7. ^ Kerr 2000, p. 89.
  8. ^ Pearson 1991, p. 269.
  9. ^ Smits 2019, pp. 111–113.
  10. ^ Smits 2024, pp. 229–231.
  11. ^ Smits 2010, pp. 52–53.
  12. ^ Pearson 1991, p. 271.
  13. ^ Smits 2024, p. 231.
  14. ^ Smits 2019, pp. 77–79, 84, 88.
  15. ^ Smits 2019, p. 86.
  16. ^ Smits 2019, p. 45.
  17. ^ Pearson 2013, pp. 239–241.
  18. ^ Pearson 1991, p. 270.
  19. ^ Pearson 2013, pp. 259–260.
  20. ^ a b McNally 2015, pp. 89–90.
  21. ^ Pearson 2013, p. 251.
  22. ^ Smits 2019, pp. 113–115.

Bibliography

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