Shō Taikyū
| Shō Taikyū 尚泰久 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taisei Tsūhō cash coin, produced under Shō Taikyū | |||||
| King of Ryukyu King of Chūzan | |||||
| Reign | 1454–1460 | ||||
| Predecessor | Shō Kinpuku | ||||
| Successor | Shō Toku | ||||
| Born | 1410 | ||||
| Died | 1460 | ||||
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| Okinawan pronunciation | Shō Tēchū (尚泰久) | ||||
| Divine name | Nanoshiyomoi (那之志與茂伊) | ||||
| House | First Shō dynasty | ||||
| Father | Various described as Shō Kinpuku, Shō Hashi, or the lord of Goeku | ||||
| Religion | Zen Buddhism | ||||
Shō Taikyū (1410–1460) was a king of the first Shō dynasty of the Ryukyu Kingdom of the western Pacific island of Okinawa, reigning from 1454 to 1460. Although described in the official histories of Ryukyu and the Ming annals as a relative of the previous rulers, he may have been an unrelated ruler of the castle of Goeku, taking power amidst a succession crisis between two other lords which resulted in the destruction of Shuri Castle. He rebuilt the castle during his reign and saw the transformation of Shuri into the political and economic center of Okinawa. A sponsor of Zen Buddhism, he invited Japanese monks to settle in the kingdom and authorized the foundation of four Buddhist temples in his kingdom. He commissioned a number of large bronze bells, including the inscribed Bridge of Nations Bell which was displayed at Shuri. The kingdom's first domestic coinage was produced during his reign.
In 1458, a conflict broke out between Amawari, the aji (lord) of Katsuren, and Gosamaru, the aji of Nakagusuku. Given a dramatic legendary narrative in the official histories, the conflict allowed Taikyū to take control of the two gusuku (castles) and monopolize trade connections with Joseon. He died in 1460 with no recorded cause of death. His successor, Shō Toku, was officially recorded as his son, but may have been an unrelated leader (possibly a wakō pirate) who overthrew Taikyū. Toku later died and was succeeded by Kanemaru, a close ally of Taikyū.