Tomigusuku Ueekata Seiryō (豊見城 親方 盛良, 1 July 1586 – 26 September 1642), also known by his Chinese style name Mō Taiun (毛 泰運), was a bureaucrat of the Ryukyu Kingdom.[1]
Tomigusuku Seiryō | |
---|---|
豊見城 盛良 | |
sanshikan of Ryukyu | |
In office 1627–1642 | |
Preceded by | Gushichan Anshi |
Succeeded by | Kunigami Chōki |
Personal details | |
Born | Ryukyu Kingdom | July 1, 1586
Died | September 26, 1642 near Tokunoshima | (aged 56)
Parent | Tomigusuku Seizoku (father) |
Chinese name | Mō Taiun (毛 泰運) |
Rank | Ueekata |
Tomigusuku Seiryō was the sixth head of an aristocrat family called Mō-uji Tomigusuku Dunchi (毛氏豊見城殿内). He was the eldest son of Tomigusuku Seizoku.[1]
Tomigusuku was elected as a member of Sanshikan in 1627.[1][2] King Shō Hō dispatched Prince Chatan Chōshū (北谷 朝秀, also known as Shō Kei 尚 慶) and him in 1638 to celebrate Shimazu Mitsuhisa succeeded as daimyō of Satsuma. Prince Chatan returned to Ryukyu in the next year, but Tomigusuku remained in Satsuma to handle official business. He sailed back to Ryukyu in 1642 but his ship was shipwrecked near Tokunoshima.[1][3] His body was not found so he had no grave.[4]
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Tomigusuku Seiryō." Okinawa konpakuto jiten (沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia").
- ^ "中山王府相卿伝職年譜 向祐等著写本". Archived from the original on 2017-09-02. Retrieved 2017-06-23.
- ^ Chūzan Seifu, appendix vol.1
- ^ "2013年度第4期首里大学". syuri-sinkoukai.com. Archived from the original on 2018-01-22.