Names Of Ryukyu
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is a name with multiple referents. The
endonym An endonym (from Greek: , 'inner' + , 'name'; also known as autonym) is a common, ''native'' name for a geographical place, group of people, individual person, language or dialect, meaning that it is used inside that particular place, group, ...
prototypically refers to
Okinawa Island is the largest of the Okinawa Islands and the Ryukyu (''Nansei'') Islands of Japan in the Kyushu region. It is the smallest and least populated of the five main islands of Japan. The island is approximately long, an average wide, and has an ...
in southwestern
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
. Today it can cover some surrounding islands (i.e.,
Okinawa Islands The Okinawa Islands ( or ) are an island group in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan and are the principal island group of the prefecture. The Okinawa Islands are part of the larger Ryukyu Islands group and are located between the Amami Islands of Kagoshi ...
) and, more importantly, can refer to
Okinawa Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan. Okinawa Prefecture is the southernmost and westernmost prefecture of Japan, has a population of 1,457,162 (as of 2 February 2020) and a geographic area of 2,281 km2 (880 sq mi). Naha is the capital and largest city o ...
, a much larger administrative division of Japan, although the people from the Miyako and
Yaeyama Islands The Yaeyama Islands (八重山列島 ''Yaeyama-rettō'', also 八重山諸島 ''Yaeyama-shotō'', Yaeyama: ''Yaima'', Yonaguni: ''Daama'', Okinawan: ''Yeema'', Northern Ryukyuan: ''Yapema'') are an archipelago in the southwest of Okinawa ...
still feel a strong sense of otherness to ''Okinawa''. A related term, , also has multiple semantic domains. It was a name for an Okinawa-centered kingdom before it was replaced with Okinawa Prefecture in 1879. ''Ryūkyū'' was an
exonym An endonym (from Greek: , 'inner' + , 'name'; also known as autonym) is a common, ''native'' name for a geographical place, group of people, individual person, language or dialect, meaning that it is used inside that particular place, group, ...
for Okinawa Island and remained largely alien to the native populations. Westerners have used the word for a larger chain of islands (the
Ryukyu Islands The , also known as the or the , are a chain of Japanese islands that stretch southwest from Kyushu to Taiwan: the Ōsumi, Tokara, Amami, Okinawa, and Sakishima Islands (further divided into the Miyako and Yaeyama Islands), with Yonaguni ...
, or the Ryukyus), for which the native populations have no folkloristic term. Detached from the native populations' perception, the Western usage became mainstream in multiple disciplines of natural sciences although there remains a non-negligible disagreement over the exact extent of the un-Ryukyuan term.


''Okinawa''


Okinawa Island

The first known possible reference to ''Okinawa'' can be found in the '' Tō Dai-wajō Tōsei-den'' (779), a biography of Chinese Buddhist monk
Jianzhen Jianzhen (; 688–763), or Ganjin in Japanese, was a Chinese monk who helped to propagate Buddhism in Japan. In the eleven years from 743 to 754, Jianzhen attempted to visit Japan some six times. Ganjin finally came to Japan in the year 753 and ...
written by
Ōmi no Mifune was a Japanese scholar and writer of '' kanshi'' (poetry in Classical Chinese) and ''kanbun'' (prose in Classical Chinese), who lived in the Nara period of Japanese history. Biography Birth and ancestry Mifune was born in 722.'' Nihon Kot ...
. Jianzhen and a Japanese embassy to Tang China accidentally stopped over the Southern Islands during their travel to Japan in 753. One of the islands mentioned in the book was ''A-ko-na-ha'' (阿児奈波), which the book stated was located southwest of
Tanegashima is one of the Ōsumi Islands belonging to Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. The island, 444.99 km2 in area, is the second largest of the Ōsumi Islands, and has a population of 33,000 people. Access to the island is by ferry, or by air to New ...
. ''A-ko-na-ha'' is usually identified as Okinawa Island. However, this identification is not without a problem as the biography suggested that Jianzhen's ship had spent only one day to travel from ''A-ko-na-ha'' to
Yakushima , native_name_link = , image_caption = Landsat image of Yakushima , image_size = , nickname = , location = East China Sea , coordinates = , map = Japan#Japan Kagoshima Prefecture , map_relief ...
, which is about 500 km away from Okinawa Island. Before the famous voyage, the Japanese imperial court had dispatched several expeditions to the Southern Islands but for unknown reasons, the name of ''Okinawa'' was absent from the records. The hiragana spelling おきなは was first attested in the Nagato Manuscript of ''
the Tale of the Heike is an epic poetry, epic account compiled prior to 1330 of the struggle between the Taira clan and Minamoto clan for control of Japan at the end of the 12th century in the Genpei War (1180–1185). Heike () refers to the Taira (), ''hei'' being ...
'' (circa 1300). A Muromachi-period document dated 1404 mentioned an ''Okinau ship'' (をきなう船), which was dispatched by the Okinawa-based kingdom of Ryūkyū to pay tribute to the
Ashikaga shogunate The , also known as the , was the feudal military government of Japan during the Muromachi period from 1336 to 1573.Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005)"''Muromachi-jidai''"in ''Japan Encyclopedia'', p. 669. The Ashikaga shogunate was establ ...
. The Okinawa-based kingdom of Ryūkyū referred to their island as ''Okinawa'' for numerous occasions. The ''Yarazamori Gusuku Inscription'' (1554) associates ''Okinawa'' (おきなは) with the earth under the king (天下). The ''
Omoro Sōshi The is a compilation of ancient poems and songs from Okinawa and the Amami Islands, collected into 22 volumes and written primarily in hiragana with some simple kanji. There are 1,553 poems in the collection, but many are repeated; the number of ...
'', a compilation of archaic ritual songs, contains a dozen of songs referring to ''Okinawa'' (おきなわ and おきにや). The small polity used a predominantly kana writing style before switching to conventional sōrō-style Written Japanese as a result of the conquest by
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. The Satsuma Domain was based at Kagoshima Castle in Satsuma Province, the core of the modern city of Kagoshima, ...
in 1609. Kanji logographs assigned to ''Okinawa'' have changed over time. Following the conquest in 1609, Satsuma conducted land surveys, gradually standardizing Kanji assigned to Okinawan toponyms. A common spelling before and immediately after the conquest was the inauspicious-looking 悪鬼納 (the first two characters mean evil demon), but Satsuma started using the current spelling 沖縄 as early as the 1620s. This spelling was popularized in mainland Japan by the '' Nantōshi'' (1719). Its author
Arai Hakuseki was a Confucianist, scholar-bureaucrat, academic, administrator, writer and politician in Japan during the middle of the Edo period, who advised the ''shōgun'' Tokugawa Ienobu. His personal name was Kinmi or Kimiyoshi (君美). Hakuseki (白 ...
was likely to have consulted a map of Okinawa Island submitted to the
Tokugawa Shogunate The Tokugawa shogunate (, Japanese 徳川幕府 ''Tokugawa bakufu''), also known as the , was the military government of Japan during the Edo period from 1603 to 1868. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005)"''Tokugawa-jidai''"in ''Japan Encyclopedia ...
by Satsuma Domain in 1702. The Shuri-Naha Okinawan form of ''Okinawa'' is ''ʔucinaa''. The raising of the vowel /o/ to /u/ was a pan-Ryukyuan areal phenomenon while the palatalization of /k/ to /c/ ɕbefore /i/ was a relatively recent change with a much geographically limited distribution. Most Northern Okinawan varieties resist this change. Even among South-Central varieties, Itoman, Komesu, Ōyama, and Tsuken Island varieties remain unaffected. For its conservativeness, the Standard Japanese form is effectively undoing historical sound changes.


Okinawa Islands

Adopting Western practices, the Japanese government started naming large groups of islands in the early Meiji period. The ''Nantō Suiro-shi'' (1873), the first coast pilot of the Nansei Islands published by the Hydrographic Office of the
Imperial Japanese Navy The Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN; Kyūjitai: Shinjitai: ' 'Navy of the Greater Japanese Empire', or ''Nippon Kaigun'', 'Japanese Navy') was the navy of the Empire of Japan from 1868 to 1945, when it was dissolved following Japan's surrender ...
, is credited for coining the name ''Okinawa Shotō'' (沖縄諸島, literally, Okinawa Islands). Its author, Captain
Yanagi Narayoshi Yanagi Narayoshi ( ja, 柳楢悦; October 8, 1832 – January 15, 1891) was a Japanese mathematician, hydrographer, politician, and Imperial Japanese Navy officer. His father was Yanagi Sogoro, a samurai officer of the Tsu domain at Edo. Bri ...
, initially consulted the British ''China Pilot'' forth edition (1864). Dissatisfied with a mixture of European, Chinese, and Japanese names in the European charts, he decided to give Japanese names to Japanese islands. According to Yanagi's classification, the ''Okinawa Shotō'' had smaller geographical extents than the modern Okinawa Islands as the ''Okinawa Shotō'', the ''Kerama Shotō'', and the ''Iheya Shotō'' constituted the ''Ryūkyū Guntō'' (literally, Ryūkyū Group). The name of ''Ryūkyū Guntō'' was replaced by ''Okinawa Guntō'' (沖縄群島) in 1883, and thereafter, the name of ''Okinawa Guntō'' has been used without interruption by the Hydrographic Office of the Imperial Japanese Navy and its successor, the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department of the
Japan Coast Guard The is the coast guard of Japan. The Japan Coast Guard consists of about 13,700 personnel and is responsible for the protection of the coastline of Japan under the oversight of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Th ...
. The Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department of the Japan Coast Guard is not the sole government organ that defines official geographical names of Japan. The
Geospatial Information Authority of Japan The , or GSI, is the national institution responsible for surveying and mapping the national land of Japan. The former name of the organization from 1949 until March 2010 was Geographical Survey Institute; despite the rename, it retains the same ...
(GSI), a subsidiary agency of the
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism The , abbreviated MLIT, is a ministry of the Japanese government.国土交通省設置法 ...
, provides administratively-oriented names. A geographical area that roughly corresponds to the ''Okinawa Guntō'' is referred to as ''Okinawa Shotō'' by the GSI. The two government organs are working on standardizing the names for large geographical entities and their extents. The geographical extent of the Okinawa Islands coincides with those of some taxonomic units proposed in a variety of humanities disciplines. For example, Okinawan is a subgroup of Northern Ryukyuan (Amami–Okinawan) languages, with the other subgroup being Amami. The speakers of the Okinawan subgroup concentrate in the Okinawa Islands if modern emigrants are not counted. While some propose a hypothetical subgrouping of Southern Amami–Northern Okinawan and thereby reject the unity of Okinawan, Pellard (2015) re-evaluates the traditional two-way division from a novel phylogenetic point of view. To complicate matters, the third edition of the UNESCO ''Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger of Extinction'' (2009) unilaterally gave the name of ''Okinawan'' to a dialect cluster occupying the "central and southern parts of Okinawa Island and neighbouring islands". In the linguistic literature, however, this subgroup is commonly known as ''Central Okinawan'', ''South–Central Okinawan'', or ''South Okinawan''. These abstract geographical entities were recognized independently of the local populations. In fact, people of
Kume Island is an island, part of the Okinawa Islands and administratively part of the town of Kumejima, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. It has an area of . The island had a population of 8,713 (2010). Kume Island is a volcanic island. Its principal economic ...
, which is part of the Okinawa Islands, maintain a strong notion that they are not Okinawans.


Okinawa Prefecture

The geographical extent of ''Okinawa'' was expanded in a similar manner when the Japanese Empire annexed the Ryukyu Kingdom and established
Okinawa Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan. Okinawa Prefecture is the southernmost and westernmost prefecture of Japan, has a population of 1,457,162 (as of 2 February 2020) and a geographic area of 2,281 km2 (880 sq mi). Naha is the capital and largest city o ...
in 1879. The Meiji government generally avoided retaining the names of old provinces and instead named new first-class administrative divisions after cities or
districts A district is a type of administrative division that, in some countries, is managed by the local government. Across the world, areas known as "districts" vary greatly in size, spanning regions or counties, several municipalities, subdivisions o ...
where the administration offices were located. For some reason, however, the southwesternmost prefecture of the empire was named after an island. Both contemporary and modern scholars speculate that the Meiji government disfavored the name of ''Ryūkyū'' for its Chinese origin because it remained cautious about China's territorial ambitions in Okinawa. With the modern prefecture, the semantic domain of ''Okinawa'' has extended to Okinawa's southern neighbors, the Miyako and
Yaeyama Islands The Yaeyama Islands (八重山列島 ''Yaeyama-rettō'', also 八重山諸島 ''Yaeyama-shotō'', Yaeyama: ''Yaima'', Yonaguni: ''Daama'', Okinawan: ''Yeema'', Northern Ryukyuan: ''Yapema'') are an archipelago in the southwest of Okinawa ...
, which are collectively referred to by the Okinawa-centric name of the ''
Sakishima Islands The (or 先島群島, ''Sakishima-guntō'') (Okinawan language, Okinawan: ''Sachishima'', Miyakoan language, Miyako: ''Saksїzїma'', Yaeyama language, Yaeyama: ''Sakїzїma'', Yonaguni language, Yonaguni: ''Satichima'') are an archipelago loca ...
''. There is an asymmetry in the process of embracing this new notion in daily life. On the one hand, people on Okinawa Island, younger generations in particular, tend to take it for granted that ''Okinawa'' (including its dialectal form ''ʔucinaa'') covers the Yaeyamas. On the other hand, people on
Ishigaki Island , also known as ''Ishigakijima'', is a Japanese island south-west of Okinawa Hontō and the second-largest island of the Yaeyama Island group, behind Iriomote Island. It is located approximately south-west of Okinawa Hontō. It is within the ...
of the Yaeyama Islands maintains the traditional dichotomy of ''Okinawa'' (''ʔukïnaː'') and ''Yaeyama'' (''jaima''), and therefore feel a clear sense of otherness to ''Okinawa''. The same holds true for the Miyako Islands. Nevertheless, Okinawa Prefecture has been there for generations, and young people in the Yaeyamas is developing the notion that they belong to ''Okinawa'' although it remains completely natural to say "go to Okinawa" when they fly from Ishigaki to Naha.


''Ryūkyū''


The un-Ryukyuan nature of ''Ryūkyū''

''Ryūkyū'' is a rare word, if any, in Ryukyuan languages. In fact, it is not uncommon that a dictionary or glossary of a Ryukyuan language has no entry for ''Ryūkyū''. Even for the male samurai register of Shuri Okinawan, Shimabukuro Seibin (1890–1970) explained the word ''ruucuu'' (the Shuri speech form) in the ''Okinawa-go Jiten'' (1963) as follows: Ironically, ''Ryūkyū'' sounds very un-Ryukyuan. The prohibition of word-initial /r/ is an
areal feature In geolinguistics, areal features are elements shared by languages or dialects in a geographic area, particularly when such features are not descended from a proto-language, or, common ancestor language. That is, an areal feature is contrasted to ...
that is not limited to Ryukyuan but to
Altaic languages Altaic (; also called Transeurasian) is a controversial proposed language family that would include the Turkic languages, Turkic, Mongolic languages, Mongolic and Tungusic languages, Tungusic language families and possibly also the Japonic la ...
, which cover wide areas of Eurasia. In fact, ''Ryūkyū'' is an
exonym An endonym (from Greek: , 'inner' + , 'name'; also known as autonym) is a common, ''native'' name for a geographical place, group of people, individual person, language or dialect, meaning that it is used inside that particular place, group, ...
recorded by the Chinese. The fact that the Chinese characters assigned to ''Liuqiu'' have changed over time (流求, 留仇, 流虬, 瑠求, 琉球, etc.) indicates that it was borrowed in turn from some non-Chinese language. Because Ryukyuan is unlikely to be the donor of the un-Ryukyuan word, most scholars seek its etymological root in Austronesian languages of
Taiwan Taiwan, officially the Republic of China (ROC), is a country in East Asia, at the junction of the East and South China Seas in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, with the People's Republic of China (PRC) to the northwest, Japan to the nort ...
. It was only an accident of history that Ryūkyū came to point to Okinawa Island. Chinese ''Liuqiu'' was first attested in the ''
Book of Sui The ''Book of Sui'' (''Suí Shū'') is the official history of the Sui dynasty. It ranks among the official Twenty-Four Histories of imperial China. It was written by Yan Shigu, Kong Yingda, and Zhangsun Wuji, with Wei Zheng as the lead author. ...
'' (636), which stated that Sui China had sent expeditions to what it called ''Liuqiu'' (流求) three times in 607 and 608. The fragmentary and apparently inconsistent description in the ''Book of Sui'' is the source of a never-ending scholarly debate over what was referred to by ''Liuqiu'': Taiwan, Okinawa Island or both. Chinese records written during the
Mongol The Mongols ( mn, Монголчууд, , , ; ; russian: Монголы) are an East Asian ethnic group native to Mongolia, Inner Mongolia in China and the Buryatia Republic of the Russian Federation. The Mongols are the principal member of ...
Yuan dynasty The Yuan dynasty (), officially the Great Yuan (; xng, , , literally "Great Yuan State"), was a Mongol-led imperial dynasty of China and a successor state to the Mongol Empire after its division. It was established by Kublai, the fifth ...
suggested that ''Liuqiu'' was Taiwan. For example, the ''
Wenxian Tongkao The ''Wenxian Tongkao'' () or ''Tongkao'' was one of the model works of the ''Tongdian'' compiled by Ma Duanlin in 1317, during the Yuan Dynasty. References *Dong, Enlin, et al. (2002). ''Historical Literature and Cultural Studies''. Wuhan: Hubei ...
'' (1317) stated that ''Liuqiu'' was located to the east of
Quanzhou Quanzhou, postal map romanization, alternatively known as Chinchew, is a prefecture-level city, prefecture-level port city on the north bank of the Jin River, beside the Taiwan Strait in southern Fujian, China. It is Fujian's largest metrop ...
, a port city facing the
Taiwan Strait The Taiwan Strait is a -wide strait separating the island of Taiwan and continental Asia. The strait is part of the South China Sea and connects to the East China Sea to the north. The narrowest part is wide. The Taiwan Strait is itself a s ...
, and was visible from the
Penghu Islands The Penghu (, Hokkien POJ: ''Phîⁿ-ô͘''  or ''Phêⁿ-ô͘'' ) or Pescadores Islands are an archipelago of 90 islands and islets in the Taiwan Strait, located approximately west from the main island of Taiwan, covering an area ...
in the middle of the strait. Similarly, the ''
History of Yuan The ''History of Yuan'' (''Yuán Shǐ''), also known as the ''Yuanshi'', is one of the official Chinese historical works known as the ''Twenty-Four Histories'' of China. Commissioned by the court of the Ming dynasty, in accordance to political ...
'' (1369), which was compiled by the succeeding Ming dynasty, reinforces the identification of ''Liuqiu'' as Taiwan. According to the book, the
Mongol Empire The Mongol Empire of the 13th and 14th centuries was the largest contiguous land empire in history. Originating in present-day Mongolia in East Asia, the Mongol Empire at its height stretched from the Sea of Japan to parts of Eastern Europe, ...
tried in vain to subjugate what it called ''Liuqiu'' (瑠求) twice in 1292 and 1297. The Penghu Islands and ''Liuqiu'' faced each other and the envoys of 1292 visited Penghu en route to ''Liuqiu''. In 1372, the newly established Ming China sent an envoy to Okinawa Island. Satto, one of the local rulers of the island, was given the title of ''King of Chūzan of the State of Ryūkyū'' (琉球国中山王). Historian Ikeya Machiko speculates that receiving tributes from ''Liuqiu'' was of great symbolic significance in Ming Chinese domestic politics because ''Liuqiu'' was known to have repelled the Mongol khans' attempts of subjugation. In reality, however, Ming China appears to have been aware of the fact that what it called ''Liuqiu'' was different from what the Mongol khans failed to conquer. Thereafter the Chinese distinguished Okinawa Island from Taiwan by referring to the former by ''Great Liuqiu'' (大琉球), as opposed to ''Little Liuqiu'' (小琉球). In few centuries, the Chinese ceased the use of ''Little Liuqiu'', replacing it with ''Dongfan'', ''Beigang'', and ''Keelung'' before ''Taiwan'' became the standard name for the much larger island. The early Chinese narratives on ''Liuqiu'', such as that in the ''Book of Sui'', shaped the Japanese perception of ''Ryūkyū'' that lasted for a long time. ''Ryūkyū'' was considered to be a land of man-eating demons and thus one of the greatest fears of Japanese Buddhist monks sailing to China. The first known Japanese use of the word was of 803, when Buddhist monk
Kūkai Kūkai (; 27 July 774 – 22 April 835Kūkai was born in 774, the 5th year of the Hōki era; his exact date of birth was designated as the fifteenth day of the sixth month of the Japanese lunar calendar, some 400 years later, by the Shingon sec ...
sent a letter to a Chinese official. Kūkai stated that during a voyage to China, Kūkai and others "had lost their courage at the thought of the tiger-like nature of (the people of) Ryūkyū" (失膽留求之虎性). Similarly,
Enchin (814–891) was a Japanese Buddhist monk who founded of the Jimon school of Tendai Buddhism and Chief Abbot of Mii-dera at the foot of Mount Hiei. After succeeding to the post of Tendai , in 873, a strong rivalry developed between his followers ...
drifted to what he believed to be Ryūkyū during his voyage to Tang China in 853. He later described Ryūkyū as the land of
cannibals Cannibalism is the act of consuming another individual of the same species as food. Cannibalism is a common ecological interaction in the animal kingdom and has been recorded in more than 1,500 species. Human cannibalism is well documented, bo ...
(所謂流捄国喫人之地). Even as late as 1244, the Buddhist monk
Keisei Keisei may refer to: *Keisei (monk) *Keisei Electric Railway *Keisei Bus The is a bus company within the Keisei Group which was established on 1 October 2003 to inherit all business of the Keisei Electric Railway bus department. Local bus ser ...
recorded the same perception in the ''
Hyōtō Ryūkyū-koku ki The ''Hyōtō Ryūkyū-koku ki'' (漂到流球国記) (loosely translated as ''Record of Drifting to the State of Ryūkyū) was a book written by Japanese Buddhist monk Keisei in 1244. He interviewed travelers who, during a sea voyage to Song Chin ...
''.


Ryukyu Kingdom on Okinawa Island

The Okinawans embraced the fact that their land was somewhat accidentally labeled as ''Ryūkyū'' by the Chinese. In diplomatic correspondence with China and countries under the Chinese world order such as Korea, the "king" styled himself as ''King of Chūzan of the State of Ryūkyū'' in Classical Chinese. The king seems to have proclaimed himself to be the ''yo-no-nushi of the State of Ryūkyū'' (りうきう国のよのぬし) in a letter to the
Ashikaga shōgun Ashikaga (足利) may refer to: * Ashikaga clan (足利氏 ''Ashikaga-shi''), a Japanese samurai clan descended from the Minamoto clan; and that formed the basis of the eponymous shogunate ** Ashikaga shogunate (足利幕府 ''Ashikaga bakufu''), a ...
, as this phrase is attested in the shogun's reply to the now-lost letter. ''Ryūkyū'' can also be found in some stone inscriptions found on Okinawa Island. However, the un-Ryukyuan word remained alien to the Okinawans. There is no wonder that no single instance of ''Ryūkyū'' can be found in the ritual songs in the 22 volumes of the ''Omoro Sōshi'', which reflects the Okinawan world-view. Over the course of centuries, the Okinawa-centered polity gradually expanded its sphere of influence to the north and to the south. In the second half of the 15th century, the kings themselves led military campaigns against
Amami Ōshima , also known as Amami, is the largest island in the Amami archipelago between Kyūshū and Okinawa. It is one of the Satsunan Islands. The island, 712.35 km2 in area, has a population of approximately 73,000 people. Administratively it is d ...
and
Kikai Island is one of the Satsunan Islands, classed with the Amami archipelago between Kyūshū and Okinawa. The island, in area, has a population of approximately 7,657 persons. Administratively the island forms the town of Kikai, Kagoshima Prefectur ...
of the Amami Islands. Ryūkyū tightened control of the islands in the north after a major armed revolt on Amami Ōshima in 1537. As a result of Satsuma's conquest of Ryūkyū in 1609, however, the Amami Islands was ceded to Satsuma and have since then shared a much longer history with Satsuma than with Okinawa. As for the southern neighbors, local rulers of the Miyako and Yaeyama Islands are said to initiate contact with Ryūkyū at the end of the 14th century. In 1500, a military conflict among local rulers of the two island groups provoked a large armed intervention from Ryūkyū. Nevertheless, the relationship between Ryūkyū and the remote islands was only loosely maintained by tribute-paying local rulers. The situation changed after Satsuma's conquest of Ryūkyū in 1609. As an early modern polity, Satsuma introduced to Ryūkyū the system of controlling people within a strictly delimited territory. The Miyako and Yaeyama Islands were formally recognized as the heritable properties of the king (or the provincial governor as Satsuma called the king for decades following the conquest), and people there suffered from poll tax imposed by the Okinawan polity. Ryūkyū's territorial expansion, however, did not remove the word's prototypical association with Okinawa Island. The association remained particularly strong for Chinese ''Liuqiu''. Since the ''Shi Liuqiu lu'' (1535), several memoirs of Chinese envoys to Ryūkyū have recorded glossaries of Okinawan words and phrases, where Chinese ''Liuqiu'' was routinely translated as ''Okinawa''. For example, ''Liuqiu ren'' (琉球人) was translated as ''Okinawa hito'' (''*okina(ː) pit͡ɕu'', 倭急拿必周). Chinese envoys to Ryūkyū used the expression "arrive at Ryūkyū" (至琉球) only when they landed at the port of Naha or entered the Shuri Castle. They sometimes visited Kume Island on the route to wait for favorable wind conditions, but they did not utter the phrase there even though they knew that Kume Island was under the rule of Ryūkyū. The Kagoshima Japanese form of ''Ryūkyū'' is ''Jiki''. As Ryūkyū's suzerain, Satsuma Domain had heavy financial reliance on brown sugar production in Amami and Ryūkyū. For this reason, ''Jiki'' metonymically refers to black sugar in
Kagoshima Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyushu and the Ryukyu Islands. Kagoshima Prefecture has a population of 1,599,779 (1 January 2020) and has a geographic area of 9,187 km2 (3,547 sq mi). Kagoshima Prefecture borders Kumamoto P ...
. The Okinawans found derogatory nuances in the word ''Jiki-jin'' (literally, Ryūkyū person/people, i.e., Okinawan people). Ryukyu Kingdom was replaced with Okinawa Prefecture in 1879. In the view point of Okinawans, ''Ryūkyū'' is an entity that no longer exists and accordingly there is no such group called "Ryukyuan people" today.


The Ryukyu Islands and the Western origin of the concept

The ''Kitab al-Fawa'id fi Usul 'Ilm al-Bahr wa 'l-Qawa'id'' (circa 1490) by the Arab navigator
Ahmad ibn Mājid Aḥmad ibn Mājid ( ar, أحمد بن ماجد), known as "Amīr al-Baḥr al-ʿArabī" in Arabic ( ar, أمير البحر العربي), “Prince of the Sea” and known also as the ''Lion of the Sea'', was an Arab navigator and cartographer ...
is the first known source outside the
Sinosphere The East Asian cultural sphere, also known as the Sinosphere, the Sinic world, the Sinitic world, the Chinese cultural sphere, the Chinese character sphere encompasses multiple countries in East Asia and Southeast Asia that were historically ...
that mentions ''Ryūkyū''. According to the Arabic book, ''Likīwū'' was a Jawi name for an island called ''al-Ghūr'' (الغور). Its association with iron, iron blades, and an antagonism toward China points to mainland Japan, rather than to Okinawa Island, however. In the ''Minhaj al-Fahir'', Ibn Majid's student Sulayman al-Mahri made a similar reference to ''jazīrat Likyū'' (literally, ''Ryūkyū Island'') as an alias of ''al-Ghūr''. The Arabic term ''al-Ghūr'' appears to point to Chinese ''Luoji'' (落漈), an imaginary area in the sea east of China. The Chinese believed that sea water fell at Luoji and thereby that the sea level was kept constant despite the endless flow of river water into the sea. In Chinese narratives, ''Luoji'' was associated with Ryūkyū and the sea route to Okinawa Island. Through contact with Muslim merchants, the Portuguese learned that people called ''Gores'' visited Southeast Asian ports for trade. The first known Western reference to ''Gores'' was from
Malacca Malacca ( ms, Melaka) is a state in Malaysia located in the southern region of the Malay Peninsula, next to the Strait of Malacca. Its capital is Malacca City, dubbed the Historic City, which has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site si ...
in 1510, a year before the conquest of the port city by
Afonso de Albuquerque Afonso de Albuquerque, 1st Duke of Goa (; – 16 December 1515) was a Portuguese general, admiral, and statesman. He served as viceroy of Portuguese India from 1509 to 1515, during which he expanded Portuguese influence across the Indian Ocean ...
. The Portuguese
demonym A demonym (; ) or gentilic () is a word that identifies a group of people (inhabitants, residents, natives) in relation to a particular place. Demonyms are usually derived from the name of the place (hamlet, village, town, city, region, province, ...
apparently derived from Arabic ''al-Ghūr''. In few years, ''Gores'' came to be associated with another name, ''Lequios'' or ''Lequeos''. The ''Commentarios do Grande Affonso d'Alboquerque'' (1557) used a rare derived form ''Lequea'' as the name of their country. Early Portuguese sources were consistent with the Chinese view in that they considered the land of the ''Lequeos'' to be an island (''ilha'', singular). The ''
Suma Oriental Suma may refer to: Places * Suma, Azerbaijan, a village * Suma, East Azerbaijan, a village in Iran * Sowmaeh, Ardabil, also known as Şūmā, a village in Iran * Suma-ku, Kobe, one of nine wards of Kobe City in Japan ** Suma Station, a rai ...
'' (circa 1515) by
Tomé Pires Tomé Pires (1465?–1524 or 1540)Madureira, 150–151. was a Portuguese apothecary from Lisbon who spent 1512 to 1515 in Malacca immediately after the Portuguese conquest, at a time when Europeans were only first arriving in Southeast As ...
was a prime example of this perception. After
Fernão Pires de Andrade Captain Fernão Pires de Andrade (also spelled as Fernão Peres de Andrade; in contemporary sources, Fernam (Fernã) Perez Dandrade) (died 1552) was a Portuguese merchant, pharmacist, and official diplomat under the explorer and Portuguese Malacc ...
's expedition to Ming China from 1517 to 1518, ''Ryūkyū'' came to be described as islands (''ilhas'', plural). The term ''os Lequeos'' can be found in Vasco Calvo's letter (circa 1536). In Portuguese (and in English), a definite article plus the plural form of a toponym can refer to a group of islands, a construction that has no equivalent in East Asian languages. The so-called Biblioteca Vallicelliana map (circa 1550) was the first map that shows the label ''Ryūkyū''. Reflecting Ming Chinese terminology, the map depicts a chain of islands in which the captions ''lequio menor'' (''Little Ryūkyū'', i.e., Taiwan), ''lequio maior'' (''Great Ryūkyū'', i.e., Okinawa Island), and ''japan'' are given from the southwest to the northeast. A large caption ''LEQVIOS'' is attached to the island chain. The combination of the three names can be found in a report written by the Spanish monk
Martín de Rada Martín de Rada (Pamplona, Navarre, Spain June 30, 1533 - South China Sea, June 12, 1578; also known as Herrada) was one of the first members of the Order of Saint Augustine (OSA) to evangelize the Philippines, as well as one of the first Christi ...
in the 1570s: ''leuqiu el menor'', ''leuqiu el grande'', and ''los lequios'' (plural). Adopting Western practices, Japanese technocrats and academicians chose the Sino-Japanese term ''shotō'' (諸島) to explicitly mark the plurality of islands. A related term ''guntō'' (群島) was used in place of English ''group''. The Japanese government assigned hierarchically organized names to the southwestern islands of Japan. These names had been standardized toward the end of the 19th century. The top-level entity that covers the (nearly) entire island chain between Kyushu and Taiwan is the ''Nansei Shotō'' (南西諸島, literally, Southwestern Islands). For the subgroups of the ''Nansei Shotō'', however, there remained disagreements between the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department of the Japan Coast Guard and the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI). The former provided a flatter organization: * Nansei Shotō (南西諸島) ** Ōsumi Guntō (大隅群島) ** Tokara Rettō (吐噶喇列島) ** Amami Guntō, (奄美群島), which include
Iōtorishima or Iwo Tori-shima, also called Okinawa Torishima (沖縄鳥島), is a Volcano, volcanic island part of the Ryukyu Islands, Ryūkyū Island chain with the only active volcano in Okinawa Prefecture. Geography Iotourishima is located 65 km ...
** Okinawa Guntō (沖縄群島) ** Sakishima Shotō, (先島諸島) which covers the
Senkaku Islands The are a group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, administered by Japan. They are located northeast of Taiwan, east of China, west of Okinawa Island, and north of the southwestern end of the Ryukyu Islands. They are known in main ...
** Daitō Shotō (大東諸島) On the other hand, the GSI defined a deeper hierarchy: * Nansei Shotō (南西諸島) ** Satsunan Shotō (薩南諸島) *** Ōsumi Guntō (大隅諸島) *** Tokara Rettō (吐噶喇列島) *** Amami Shotō (奄美諸島) ** Ryūkyū Shotō (琉球諸島) ***
Iōtorishima or Iwo Tori-shima, also called Okinawa Torishima (沖縄鳥島), is a Volcano, volcanic island part of the Ryukyu Islands, Ryūkyū Island chain with the only active volcano in Okinawa Prefecture. Geography Iotourishima is located 65 km ...
*** Okinawa Shotō (沖縄諸島) *** Sakishima Shotō, (先島諸島) *** Senkaku Shotō (尖閣諸島) According to the GSI's definition, the ''Ryūkyū Shotō'' covers Okinawa Prefecture except the outlying
Daitō Islands The are an archipelago consisting of three isolated coral islands in the Philippine Sea southeast of Okinawa. The islands have a total area of and a population of 2,107. Administratively, the whole group belongs to Shimajiri District of Okinawa ...
. The two government organs have worked on resolving disagreements. As a result, the ''Satsunan Shotō'' and ''Ryūkyū Shotō'' among many others are recognized as the standard geographical names of Japan. As a member of the
International Hydrographic Organization The International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) is an intergovernmental organisation representing hydrography. , the IHO comprised 98 Member States. A principal aim of the IHO is to ensure that the world's seas, oceans and navigable waters a ...
, Japan uses these geographical names for the International (INT) Charts it produces. The name of the ''Ryukyu Islands'' became a politically sensitive matter after
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposin ...
because the U.S. separated from Japan what it called the ''Ryukyu Islands''. The U.S. Armed Forces harbored the divide-and-rule policy during the war while the
State Department The United States Department of State (DOS), or State Department, is an United States federal executive departments, executive department of the Federal government of the United States, U.S. federal government responsible for the country's fore ...
maintained that the Ryukyu Islands shall remain under the sovereignty of Japan. The State Department defined the ''Ryukyu Islands'' as the Amami, Okinawa, Sakishima, and Daitō Islands. The U.S. military, on the other hand, had obscure and inconsistent understandings of the geographical extent of the American concept. The ''Civil Affairs Handbook: Ryukyu (Loochoo) Islands'' (1944), for example, treated the ''Ryukyu Islands'' as a much wider area extending not only to the
Tokara The is an archipelago in the Nansei Islands, and are part of the Satsunan Islands, which is in turn part of the Ryukyu Archipelago. The chain consists of twelve small islands located between Yakushima and Amami-Oshima. The islands have a tota ...
and
Ōsumi Islands The is an archipelago in the Nansei Islands, and are the northernmost group of the Satsunan Islands, which is in turn part of the Ryukyu Archipelago. The chain extends from the southern tip of Kyushu to Yakushima. Administratively, the group belo ...
but also to the
Uji is a city on the southern outskirts of the city of Kyoto, in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. Founded on March 1, 1951, Uji is between the two ancient capitals of Nara and Kyoto. The city sits on the Uji River, which has its source in Lake Biwa. ...
and
Koshikijima Islands The in the East China Sea are an island chain located 38 km west of the port city of Ichikikushikino, Kagoshima. Major islands Minor islands All minor islands are currently (as in 2017) uninhabited. #seems to undergo significant erosi ...
, which are not even part of the Nansei Islands. When the U.S. first publicized its intention to separate the ''Ryukyu Islands'' from Japan in 1946, it set the boundary at the 30th parallel north, which in fact crossed the northern tip of
Kuchinoshima , literally "mouth island", is one of the Tokara Islands, belonging to Kagoshima Prefecture. The island, in area, and has a population of 140 persons. The island can only be reached by boat as it has no airport, there are regular ferry service to ...
, the northernmost inhabited island of the Tokara Islands. The procrustean boundary had its root in the wartime boundary between the areas of operation of the Sixth and Tenth Armies. The area under separate military occupation had shrunk since then. The Tokara Islands were returned to Japanese administration in 1952, which was followed by the Amami Islands in 1953. Okinawa was finally returned to Japan in 1972. The
Treaty of San Francisco The , also called the , re-established peaceful relations between Japan and the Allied Powers on behalf of the United Nations by ending the legal state of war and providing for redress for hostile actions up to and including World War II. It w ...
(1951) further illustrates the complexities surrounding the name ''Ryukyu Islands''. In its draft, the U.S. used the phrase "The Ryukyu Islands south of 29° north latitude", but the Japanese government requested twice to replace it with "Nansei Islands south of 29° north latitude", arguing that the Amami island group did not belong to the ''Ryukyu Islands'' (i.e., ''Ryūkyū Shotō'') but to the Satsunan Islands. As a political compromise, the final version adopted the redundant phrase "Nansei Shoto south of 29° north latitude (including the Ryukyu Islands and the Daito Islands)". For some reason, the ''
CIA World Factbook ''The World Factbook'', also known as the ''CIA World Factbook'', is a reference resource produced by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with almanac-style information about the countries of the world. The official print version is available ...
'' still ignores standardized geographical names of Japan and attaches the non-standard label "RYUKYU ISLANDS" on the map of Japan. The U.S. military imagined a ''Ryukyuan nation''. Although it never allocated sufficient resources to achieve this goal, it even tried in vein to create a national flag and a national anthem. However, the Okinawan view toward the U.S. military occupation critically worsened as it confiscated their ancestral lands with bulldozers and bayonets and turned them into semi-permanent military bases. The American concept of the ''Ryukyu Islands'' was translated into Japanese as ''Ryūkyū Rettō'' (琉球列島), to which the Japanese government did not give a definition. The term ''Ryūkyū Shotō'' was avoided probably because the Amami Islands and the Daitō Islands lay outside the officially defined geographical extent of the Ryūkyū Shotō. The U.S. military assigned the name of ''Ryukyu'' to the entities it created. For example, the first university on Okinawa Island was named the ''
University of the Ryukyus The , abbreviated to , is a Japanese national university in Nishihara, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. Established in 1950, it is the westernmost national university of Japan and the largest public university in Okinawa Prefecture. Located in the S ...
'', which was given the Japanese name of ''Ryūkyū Daigaku'' (琉球大学). By contrast, entities created by Okinawans themselves tended to bear the name of ''Okinawa''. The umbrella organization of the Okinawa reversion movement was named ''Okinawa-ken sokoku fukki kyōgikai'' (沖縄県祖国復帰協議会, literally, Okinawa Prefecture Council for Reversion to the Home Country). Thanks to the humiliating military occupation, ''Ryūkyū'' became loaded with negative connotations among Okinawans. Okinawa's northern neighbor, the Amami Islands, resisted much more strongly against the U.S. military's move to sever their centuries-old ties to mainland Japan and to annex them to what the Americans called the Ryukyus. At the early stage of military occupation, the U.S. military imposed the label ''Northern Ryukyu'' on the Amami Islands. While the people of Amami had no power to prevent the occupiers from using the English name, they expressed resistance by translating the much-hated term as ''Hokubu Nansei Shotō'' (literally, Northern Nansei Islands) in Japanese. A bitter memory of the U.S. military occupation strengthened the notion that the Amami Islanders were distinct from Okinawans. Even today, they occasionally voice opposition toward attempts to impose the label ''Ryūkyū'' on them.


''Ryukyu'' in natural sciences

Some disciplines of natural sciences such as biology and geology have developed a distinctive notion of ''Ryukyu'' that does not align well with administrative or ethnolinguistic boundaries. After examining inconsistent and mutually conflicting uses of ''Ryukyu''-related geographical names in the literature, Toyama (2014) proposed the following guidelines for natural sciences: *''Ryukyu Archipelago'' for the Nansei Islands, which covers the Senkaku and Daitō Islands, *''Ryukyu Islands'' for a narrower chain of islands between Kyushu and Taiwan, excluding the outlying Senkaku and Daitō Islands, and *Three-way division of the Ryukyu Islands: the ''Northern Ryukyus'', the ''Central Ryukyus'', and the ''Southern Ryukyus''. Watase's Line, the boundary between the Northern and Central Ryukyus, is drawn between
Akusekijima , is one of the Tokara Islands, a sub-group of the Satsunan Islands belonging to Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. The island, 7.42 km² in area, has a population of 59 persons. The island can only be reached by boat as it has no airport; there is ...
and
Kodakarajima , literally "small treasure island", is one of the Tokara Islands, belonging to Kagoshima Prefecture. The island, 1.0 km² in area, is the smallest inhabited island in the archipelago, and has a population of 49 people. The island can only be ...
of the Tokara Islands. Hachisuka's Line, or the
Kerama Gap The , also known as the Kerama Gap, is a waterway which lies between Miyako Island and Okinawa Island consisting of a 250km-wide passageway with international waters and airspace. It is the widest strait in the Ryukyu Islands. Political significa ...
, marks the boundary between the Central and Southern Ryukyus. The notion of ''Ryukyu'' in natural sciences deviates nonnegligibly from that of humanities. In humanities, the label ''Ryukyuan'' is used as a conventional umbrella term for an ethnolinguistic supergroup who occupies the Amami, Okinawa, Miyako, and Yaeyama Islands. In other words, the Ōsumi and Tokara Islands are by no means ''Ryukyuan'' because ethnolinguistically speaking, they clearly belong to Southern Kyushu. To further complicate matters, the ''Central Ryukyus'' do not exactly match the Amami and Okinawa Islands because they are extended further north to cover the two inhabited islands of Kodakarajima and
Takarajima , literally "treasure island", is one of the Tokara Islands, belonging to Kagoshima Prefecture. The island, 7.14 km² in area, has a population of 116 persons. The island can only be reached by boat as it has no airport; there is regular ferry ...
of the Tokara Islands. Natural scientists maintain tension with the Japanese government, according to which the ''Ryūkyū Shotō'' encompass the ''Okinawa Shotō'', the ''Sakishimau Shotō'', and the ''Senkaku Shotō''. The three-way division of natural sciences is disharmonious with the two-way administrative division of Kagoshima and Okinawa Prefectures. People on the island chain rarely voice their opinions about academic activities as they are quite remote from the discourse and knowledge of daily life. When they come to interfere with daily activities, however, strong oppositions to the label ''Ryūkyū'' emerge. For example, the World Natural Heritage site of
Amami-Ōshima Island, Tokunoshima Island, northern part of Okinawa Island, and Iriomote Island is a serial UNESCO World Heritage Site consisting of five component parts on four Japanese islands in the Ryukyu Chain of the Nansei Islands. The site was selected in terms of biodiversity ( World Heritage criterion x) for having a diverse ecosys ...
was initially given the name of ''Ryūkyū Shotō'' when a panel of natural science experts decided to add the patchy group of islands to the tentative list of nomination in 2013. However, the Amami Islands and Kagoshima Prefecture as a whole strongly opposed the label of ''Ryūkyū'' being imposed on them. As a result, the candidate site was renamed ''Amami–Ryukyu'' before it was renamed again to the current, more descriptive name in 2017.


''Ryūkyū'' as a tourism brand of Okinawa Prefecture in the Japanese market

''Ryūkyū'' has a deep connection to the mainland Japanese
gaze In critical theory, sociology, and psychoanalysis, the gaze (French ''le regard''), in the philosophical and figurative sense, is an individual's (or a group's) awareness and perception of other individuals, other groups, or oneself. The concept ...
. ''Ryūkyūs association with cannibalism had been long forgotten before the beginning of the
Edo period The or is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country's 300 regional '' daimyo''. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengoku period, the Edo period was characteriz ...
. The image of ''Ryūkyū'' in mainland Japan was primarily shaped by Ryūkyū's missions to Edo, which were intentionally alienized by Satsuma to portray Satsuma Domain and the Tokugawa shogunate as multiethnic superpowers. For its phonetic similarity, ''Ryūkyū'' was associated with '' Ryūgū'', the undersea dragon palace from fairy tales. A romanticized view of ''Ryūkyū'' can be found in
Takizawa Bakin (), a.k.a. (, 4 July 1767 – 1 December 1848), was a Japanese novelist of the Edo period. Born (), he wrote under the pen name (). Later in life he took the pen name (). Modern scholarship generally refers to him as , or just as n. He is ...
's historical fiction '' Chinsetsu Yumiharizuki'' (1807–1811), in which
Minamoto no Tametomo , also known as , was a samurai who fought in the Hōgen Rebellion of 1156. He was the son of Minamoto no Tameyoshi, and brother to Yukiie and Yoshitomo. Tametomo is known in the epic chronicles as a powerful archer and it is said that he onc ...
drifted to ''Ryūkyū'' and founded a kingdom there. The un-Japanese (and in fact un-Ryukyuan) word aroused exoticism. Modernization offered opportunities for mainland Japanese tourists to visit Okinawa Island. Shimabukuro Gen'ichirō (1885–1942), an educator from Northern Okinawa, took a key role as a tour guide for mainland Japanese intelligentsia while simultaneously enlightening fellow Okinawans. His narrative reflected the duality of ''Ryūkyū''. On the one hand, Shimabukuro went along with the tourist gaze, exploiting the exotic notion of ''Ryūkyū''. On the other hand, Shimabukuro urged mainland tourists not to use ''Ryūkyū'' because people felt insulted to be referred to by the exonym of Chinese origin. He recommended the autonym ''Okinawa'' instead. ''Ryūkyū'' was given a new role after the U.S. returned Okinawa Prefecture to Japan in 1972. The reversion triggered an economic boom, but the end of
Expo '75 Expo '75 ( ) was a World's Fair held on the island of Okinawa in Japan from July 20, 1975 to January 18, 1976. History Expo 75 was conceived, in part, to commemorate the American handover of Okinawa to Japan in 1972. The theme of the exposit ...
was followed by a recession on Okinawa Island. To reactivate tourism,
Dentsu Dentsu Inc. ( ja, 株式会社電通 ''Kabushiki-gaisha Dentsū'' or 電通 ''Dentsū'' for short) is a Japanese international advertising and public relations joint stock company headquartered in Tokyo. Dentsu is currently the largest adverti ...
, the largest
public relations Public relations (PR) is the practice of managing and disseminating information from an individual or an organization (such as a business, government agency, or a nonprofit organization) to the public in order to influence their perception. P ...
agency in Japan, proposed, among others, to exploit the unique history of Okinawa as a new tourism resource. Dentsu stressed a need to relativize the tragic
Battle of Okinawa The , codenamed Operation Iceberg, was a major battle of the Pacific War fought on the island of Okinawa by United States Army (USA) and United States Marine Corps (USMC) forces against the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). The initial invasion of ...
in 1945. Because soldiers from across mainland Japan perished on Okinawa Island, bereaved family members had accounted for a substantial portion of Japanese tourists. To overcome the negative image about Okinawa, Dentsu proposed to promote a positive image of the long history of ''Ryūkyū''. Dentsu also urged to raise awareness about the positive view of Okinawan history and culture among people of Okinawa Prefecture because it worried about possible discord between the tourism sector and the rest of the population. Okinawa Prefecture has followed the plan orchestrated by the PR agency. The historian Takara Kurayoshi (b. 1947) played an important role in promoting a romanticized view of the Ryukyu Kingdom. He supervised a historical drama television series titled '' Ryūkyū no Kaze'' (1993), which was broadcast nationwide by
NHK , also known as NHK, is a Japanese public broadcaster. NHK, which has always been known by this romanized initialism in Japanese, is a statutory corporation funded by viewers' payments of a television license fee. NHK operates two terrestri ...
. With decades of promotion, Okinawan people have internalized the mainland Japanese gaze to some degree. The Okinawan punk rock band
Mongol800 is a Japanese three-piece punk rock band from Urasoe, Okinawa, Japan formed in 1998. When the members were aged 19, the band released their first album. In 2001, despite low commercial attention, they sold over two-million records from the alb ...
released a song titled ''Ryūkyū aika'' (琉球愛歌) in 2001, where ''Ryūkyū'' was used as an apparatus of dissimilation. It was associated with a new stereotypical view of Okinawa: living in peace and in good harmony with nature.


''Uruma''

''Uruma'' is a poetic name for Okinawa Island. A city in central Okinawa took this name when it was formed by merging several municipalities in 2005. Some try to interpret the word as an Okinawan compound (''uru'' (fine sand or
coral Corals are marine invertebrates within the class Anthozoa of the phylum Cnidaria. They typically form compact colonies of many identical individual polyps. Coral species include the important reef builders that inhabit tropical oceans and sec ...
) and ''-ma'' (a common suffix for an island name)). However, it is clearly of mainland Japanese origin. In fact, this word is completely absent from Okinawan
ryūka is a genre of songs and poetry originating from the Okinawa Islands, Okinawa Prefecture of southwestern Japan. Most ryūka are featured by the 8-8-8-6 syllable structure. Concepts and classification The word ''ryūka'' ( u:kain archaic pronunciat ...
poems/songs, and its usage is limited to ''
waka Waka may refer to: Culture and language * Waka (canoe), a Polynesian word for canoe; especially, canoes of the Māori of New Zealand ** Waka ama, a Polynesian outrigger canoe ** Waka hourua, a Polynesian ocean-going canoe ** Waka taua, a Māori w ...
'' poems, which were composed by Okinawan ruling elites. The first known reference to ''Uruma'' is a waka poem by an
Heian-period The is the last division of classical Japanese history, running from 794 to 1185. It followed the Nara period, beginning when the 50th emperor, Emperor Kanmu, moved the capital of Japan to Heian-kyō (modern Kyoto). means "peace" in Japanese. ...
aristocrat named
Fujiwara no Kintō , also known as Shijō-dainagon, was a Japanese poet, admired by his contemporaries "... Fujiwara no Kinto (966–1008), the most admired poet of the day." pg 283 of Donald Keene's ''Seeds in the Heart''. and a court bureaucrat of the Heian pe ...
in the early 11th century. He compared a woman's coldheartedness to the incomprehensible speech of drifters from ''Ureung'' Island (迂陵島, identified as
Ulleung Island Ulleungdo (also spelled Ulreungdo; Hangul: , ) is a South Korean island 120 km (75 mi) east of the Korean Peninsula in the Sea of Japan, formerly known as the Dagelet Island or Argonaut Island in Europe. Volcanic in origin, the rocky s ...
) of Goryeo Kingdom. However, the association with Ulleung Island was soon forgotten because the reference to Goryeo (anachronistically called Silla by Kintō) was dropped when his poem was recorded in the ''
Senzai Wakashū , often abbreviated as ''Senzaishū'', is an imperial anthology of Japanese waka poetry. It was compiled in 1187 by Fujiwara no Shunzei at the behest of the Retired Emperor Go-Shirakawa, who ordered it in 1183. It consists of twenty volumes cont ...
'' (1188). Thereafter waka poets treated ''Uruma'' simply as an island somewhere outside of Japan with an unintelligible language. As the same time, it evoked a sense of familiarity because the phrase ''Uruma no ichi'' (market in Uruma) was poetically associated with
Mino Province was a province of Japan in the area of Japan that is today southern Gifu Prefecture. Mino was bordered by Ōmi to the west, Echizen and Hida to the north, and Shinano to the east, and Ise, Mikawa, and Owari to the south. Its abbreviat ...
in central Japan. From the viewpoint of mainland Japanese poets, Okinawa Island might have been an ideal referent of ''Uruma'' because, despite the exotic name of ''Ryūkyū'', the first reference to Okinawan composed waka poems was as early as 1496. The first known identification of ''uruma'' as Okinawa Island can be found in the ''Moshiogusa'' (1513), but the association remained weak for some time. For example,
Hokkaido is Japan's second largest island and comprises the largest and northernmost prefecture, making up its own region. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaidō from Honshu; the two islands are connected by the undersea railway Seikan Tunnel. The la ...
, in addition to Okinawa Island, was referred to as ''Uruma'' in the ''Shōzaishū'' (1597). The mainland Japanese poetic practice was adopted by Okinawan waka poets in the late 17th century. The '' Omoidegusa'' (1700), a purely Japanese
poetic diary or is a Japanese literary genre, dating back to Ki no Tsurayuki's ''Tosa Nikki'', compiled in roughly 935. Nikki bungaku is a genre including prominent works such as the ''Tosa Nikki'', ''Kagerō Nikki'', and ''Murasaki Shikibu Nikki''. While di ...
by Shikina Seimei, is known for its extensive use of the word ''uruma''.


''Naha''

Okinawa's northern neighbor, the Amami Islands, has the tradition of calling Okinawa ''Naha'', the main port town of Okinawa Island and the capital of Okinawa Prefecture. For example, people of
Okinoerabu Island , also known as Okinoerabu, is one of the Satsunan Islands, classed with the Amami archipelago between Kyūshū and Okinawa. The island, 93.63 km² in area, has a population of approximately 14,000 persons. Administratively it is divided into th ...
use ''Nafa'' for Okinawa and ''Nafanchu'' for Okinawan people. They are less conscious about the distinction between Okinawa Island and Okinawa Prefecture. The Okinawan word for Okinawans, ''Uchinaanchu'', is known to them, but they never identify themselves as Okinawans. Their autonym is ''Erabunchu''. Like Okinawans, the people of the Amami Islands have no folkloristic term that covers both the Amami people and Okinawans. The Standard Japanese word, ''Okinawa'', is borrowed into the languages of the Amami Islands. It is steadily replacing ''Naha''.


References


Links


Map of Ryūkyū-koku (1702), submitted to the Tokugawa Shogunate by Satsuma Domain
{{DEFAULTSORT:Okinawa, Names of Place name etymologies Okinawa Prefecture Okinawa Islands