Tansui Ueekata, the Glossary
was an aristocrat-bureaucrat of the Ryukyu Kingdom.[1]
Table of Contents
11 relations: Imperial Chinese missions to the Ryukyu Kingdom, Kumi Odori, Okinawan name, Pseudonym, Ryūka, Ryukyu Kingdom, Sanshin, Satsuma Domain, Shō Shōken, Theatre of Japan, Ueekata.
- 17th-century Ryukyuan people
- 17th-century musicians
- Ryukyuan culture
Imperial Chinese missions to the Ryukyu Kingdom
Imperial Chinese missions to the Ryukyu Kingdom were diplomatic missions that were intermittently sent by the Yuan, Ming and Qing emperors to Shuri, Okinawa, in the Ryukyu Islands.
See Tansui Ueekata and Imperial Chinese missions to the Ryukyu Kingdom
Kumi Odori
is a form of narrative traditional Ryūkyūan dance. Tansui Ueekata and Kumi Odori are Ryukyuan culture.
See Tansui Ueekata and Kumi Odori
Okinawan name
Okinawan names (Okinawan: 名/なー, nā) today have only two components, the family names (surnames or last names) first and the given names last.
See Tansui Ueekata and Okinawan name
Pseudonym
A pseudonym or alias is a fictitious name that a person assumes for a particular purpose, which differs from their original or true name (orthonym).
See Tansui Ueekata and Pseudonym
Ryūka
is a genre of songs and poetry originating from the Okinawa Islands, Okinawa Prefecture of southwestern Japan.
Ryukyu Kingdom
The Ryukyu Kingdom was a kingdom in the Ryukyu Islands from 1429 to 1879.
See Tansui Ueekata and Ryukyu Kingdom
Sanshin
The is an Okinawan and Amami Islands musical instrument and precursor of the mainland Japanese (三味線). Tansui Ueekata and Sanshin are Ryukyuan culture.
See Tansui Ueekata and Sanshin
Satsuma Domain
The, briefly known as the, was a domain (han) of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan during the Edo period from 1602 to 1871.
See Tansui Ueekata and Satsuma Domain
Shō Shōken
, also known as, was a Ryukyuan scholar and served as sessei, a post often translated as "prime minister," from 1666 to 1673. Tansui Ueekata and Shō Shōken are 17th-century Ryukyuan people.
See Tansui Ueekata and Shō Shōken
Theatre of Japan
Traditional Japanese theatre is among the oldest theatre traditions in the world.
See Tansui Ueekata and Theatre of Japan
Ueekata
, in the Okinawan language, was the highest rank in the yukatchu aristocracy of the former Ryukyu Kingdom (modern-day Okinawa, Japan), though it was still below the aji nobility.
See Tansui Ueekata and Ueekata
See also
17th-century Ryukyuan people
- Chatan Chōai
- Chatan Chōchō
- Goeku Chōsei
- Gushichan Chōsei
- Gushikawa Chōei
- Gusukuma Seikyū
- Ikegusuku An'i
- Ikegusuku Anken
- Ikegusuku Anrai
- Inoha Seihei
- Inoha Seiki
- Ishadō Seifu
- Jana Ueekata
- Kian (tea master)
- Kikuin Sōi
- Kin Chōtei
- Kunigami Chōchi
- Kunigami Seisoku
- Kunigami Seiya
- Mabuni Ankō
- Misato Anman
- Misato Chōtei
- Nago Ryōhō
- Nakijin Chōyō
- Oroku Chōki
- Sadoyama Anji
- Sai On
- Sai Taku
- Shikina Seimei
- Shō Kyō
- Shō Shōken
- Tajima Chōyū
- Takamine Tokumei
- Takehara An'i
- Tamagusuku Chōkun
- Tansui Ueekata
- Tei Junsoku
- Tomigusuku Seiryō
- Tomigusuku Seizoku
- Tōma Jūchin
- Urasoe Chōri
- Urasoe Chōshi
- Yamazaki Nikyū
- Yoshiya Chiru
- Yuntanza Seishō
- Ōzato Chōryō
17th-century musicians
- Constantin Christian Dedekind
- Satta Doom
- Tansui Ueekata
Ryukyuan culture
- Aha Bushi
- Amamikyu
- Bingata
- Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu
- Kijōka-bashōfu
- Kikoe-ōgimi
- Kumi Odori
- Noro (priestess)
- Onarigami
- Ryukyu New Year
- Ryukyuan art
- Ryukyuan culture
- Ryukyuan languages
- Ryukyuan music
- Ryukyuan religion
- Ryukyuan tea ceremony
- Sanshin
- Tamagusuku Chōkun
- Tansui Ueekata
- Tasato Chōchoku
- Turtleback tomb
- Tōgyū
- Uezu House