- Heshikiya Chōbin
nihongo|Heshikiya Chōbin|平敷屋朝敏|(1700-1734) was one of the leaders of a plot to overthrow
Sai On , chief royal advisor to KingShō Kei of theRyūkyū Kingdom , a plot for which he was arrested and executed. Chōbin was a scholar of Japanese literature and member of a pro-Japanese faction in the kingdom's government.The grandson of a scholar of Japanese studies, Heshikiya Chōbin is said to have been quite talented, and studied Japan from a very young age"Heshikiya Chōbin." Okinawa rekishi jinmei jiten (沖縄歴史人名事典, Encyclopedia of People of Okinawan History). Naha: Okinawa Bunkasha, 2002. p68.] .
As a member of the
Ryūkyū mission to Edo in 1718, Chōbin enjoyed the opportunity to study Japanese subjects there, and to viewkabuki ,Noh , and "ningyō jōruri" (puppet theatre) performances. Upon his return to Okinawa, he viewed the first performaces of "kumi odori ", now a major form of traditional Ryukyuan dance, and created his own piece for the form, a love story entitled "temizu no en" (手水の縁, "Fate of washwater"), in which he incorporated political criticism and evoked the wrath of King Shō Kei. Along with fellow Okinawan government officialTomoyose Anjō , he composed a letter in 1734 to the judicial offices of Japan'sSatsuma Domain , of which the Ryūkyū Kingdom was a vassal, criticizing the kingdom's government, in particular royal advisor Sai On, who was accused of being pro-Chinese. When the royal government learned of this development, Chōbin was arrested and crucified; fourteen others were likewise executed. A legend tells that Heshikiya and the daughter of Shō Kei had been in love, and that when he was executed, she threw herself from the walls of the castle, committing suicide; it is said that only her leg was found, and from then on a particular pavilion in the castle's gardens came to be known as One-Leg Pavilion ("Kunra gushiku") [Kerr, George H. "Okinawa: The History of an Island People". revised ed. Boston: Tuttle Publishing, 2000. p209.] .References
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