Hidden in the azure vastness of the East 
China Sea is a chain of tiny islands whose   diminutive size conceals a massive impact on 
world history. In the west, the subtropical   climes of the Ryukyu isles are known primarily 
as the birthplace of Karate and the site of the   bloodiest battle ever fought between the United 
States of America and the Empire of Japan.   Today, this archipelago is fully integrated into 
the modern Japanese nation-state. Yet, the natives   of Ryukyu are a unique indigenous population who 
stand apart from mainstream Japanese society with   their own languages, traditions and, historically, 
one of the most dynamic maritime trade empires   in Asian history. In this video, we will explore 
the storied past of these remarkable ocean-going   peoples, focusing on the Ryukyu Kingdom and its 
golden age at the crossroads of maritime Asia. That trade carries on even today, and we 
have delicious proof of this coming from   our sponsor TokyoTreat and SakuraCo, 
unique monthly snack boxes shipped   from Japan, packed with items rarely 
available to the rest of the world. This month’s Tokyo Treat box is Okinawa 
Seaside Snakin’, featuring the summer   specialities of Okinawa island. That means 
Okinawa Potato Chinsuko, Chilled Hiyashi Ramen,   Kamesen Senbei and loads more. There’s a similar 
selection of modern japanese specialties available   in your Tokyo Treat box each month, featuring 
special items only available seasonally, or   only available in Japan, including limited runs of 
familiar items like sakura Pepsi or sake kitkats. But if you want something more traditional, there 
is also SakuraCo, who focus on artisan snacks and   teas with a long history in japan. This month 
you’ll get the Heritage of Nikko box, which   features snacks from the long history of UNESCO 
world heritage site Nikko City; such as Hinohikari   Senbei, and Nikko Rusk that pairs perfectly 
with 88th Night Shincha Tea. SakuraCo boxes   also some with a delightful piece of tableware - 
this month you get a traditional wrapping cloth,   the Patchwork Furoshiki, used for decorating 
or storing other items, or even yourself! And both boxes come with booklets that explain the   culture surrounding each item you get, 
and other facets of the monthly theme,   so you can learn a few things as you 
enjoy your curated snacking experience. To get either or both of these monthly 
boxes delivered straight to your door,   use our link in the description to set up 
your TokyoTreat or Sakurco subscriptions,   then wait for the good stuff to come to you. The Ryukyus Islands form a thin cluster of small 
landmasses stretching from Kyushu to Taiwan,   with Okinawa being the largest and most populated 
in the chain. Today, the Ryukyus are part of   Japan's Kagoshima and Okinawa Prefectures. 
However, their native peoples are of different   ethnic stock than the Yamato people of mainland 
Japan. At least six unique languages are spoken   across the Ryukyu archipelago, such as Amami, 
Kunigani, Okinawan, Mikayo, Yaeyama and Yonaguni,   all mutually unintelligible with standard 
Japanese. For many centuries, the histories   of Japan and the Ryukyus travelled down separate 
paths. Unlike the traditionally inward-facing   Shoguns of Japan, the Kings of Ryukyu built their 
civilization on long-distance maritime trade,   resulting in a vibrantly cosmopolitan society born 
from a heavy heaping of Imperial Chinese grandeur,   a coating of Japanese feudal grace and a dash of 
spice from far-off lands like Malacca and Java.   Inversely, the cultural contribution of the 
Ryukyuans on the world stage is considerable,   especially in traditional martial arts. What do 
Ralph Macchio in The Karate Kid, Bruce Lee in   Fists of Fury, and three out of four Ninja Turtles 
have in common? They all employ weaponry or combat   forms originating on Okinawa. We will elaborate on 
that near the end of this video, but first, let us   dial the clock back and start our march through 
Ryukyu’s storied past from the very beginning.  The origins of the Ryukyuan peoples are 
shrouded in the mists of prehistory. Their   earliest ancestors likely shared much of their 
ancestry with the Jomon and Yayoi peoples of   prehistoric Japan and spoke the Proto-Japonic 
language. Over many centuries, this archaic   tongue split down multiple evolutionary 
paths, with the speech of the southern   islands eventually becoming unintelligible to 
the Old Japanese that developed on the mainland.  The climate of the Ryukyus is harsh: a land 
of dense jungles and rocky mountains regularly   battened upon by vicious typhoons. 
Due to this unforgiving environment,   the islands remained in the prehistoric stone 
age for far longer than the Japanese mainland.   In the 7th century, when the Yamato people were 
forging a sophisticated agrarian Empire, their   distant cousins were still scattered across their 
native reefs in small hunter-gatherer communities.   The early Japanese state was aware 
of their estranged insular relatives,   who they called the Nanto, meaning “southern 
island people.” The Ryukyus also appear in   the written records of ancient China. The 
annals of the Northern Wei dynasty describe   the distant islands to their east as a place 
where Sorceresses and Priestess-Queens used   their magic powers to wield absolute authority 
over men. Unlike the deeply patriarchal culture   of the Japanese mainland, Ryukyuan society has 
long featured women in positions of great power.   Even in later centuries, after secular rulership 
became the domain of male royalty, women continued   to be the islands’ main religious authorities. The 
Noro, a priesthood composed exclusively of women,   held an extremely privileged place in Ryukyuan 
society for centuries and still exists today.  Between the 11th to 13th centuries CE, 
agriculture finally took hold on the islands. This   precipitated the rise of a new hierarchy of local 
chieftains known as Aji, who ruled from Gusuku:   hilltop castles that kept a watchful eye over 
a handful of surrounding farming communities.   Over three hundred Gusuku were erected 
across the entire Ryukyu chain. That   amounted to a lot of local strongmen stuffed 
together on tiny islands with not a lot of   landmass to go around. It is no surprise, 
then, that constant warfare was the norm.   By the early 14th century, the Aji of 
Okinawa island had been consolidated into a   trio of loose-knit tribal confederations: 
Nanzan, Chuzan, and Hokuzan. Meanwhile,   great advances in shipbuilding and navigation 
technology were slowly making long-distance   merchant expeditions far more viable than they had 
been in previous centuries. This planted the seed   for the Ryukyus to rouse from the long slumber 
of obscurity and burst onto the pages of history.  In the solar system of the far east, China had 
long been the sun upon which surrounding nations   orbited. In 1368 CE, Hongwu, the first Emperor 
of the prosperous Ming Dynasty, strengthened   this Sinocentric world order by declaring that 
any nation that wished to trade had to become   a tribute-paying vassal of the Middle Kingdom. 
From Korea to Vietnam to Java, over fifty Kings   across Asia played along with this theatrical 
display of servility for access to the riches   of the Celestial Empire. In 1372, Satto, the King 
of Chuzan, sent a tribute legation to Great Ming,   beginning an era of Chinese suzerainty over 
the Ryukyu islands that would last for 500   years. As it happened, the Okinawans were in a 
perfect geographical position to benefit from   subservient cooperation with China, for the 
Ming Empire was in need of an intermediary to   springboard its seabound commercial missions to 
its tributaries located further across the sea.   Thus, the Ryukyuans became key middlemen in an 
extremely lucrative trade network connecting China   with exotic locales like Champa, Khmer, Siam, 
and Java. Okinawa’s propulsion into international   relevance coincided with its unification. In 1416, 
Shō Hashi, the King of Chuzan, conquered Hokuzan,   and in 1429, Nanzan followed. To secure 
the legitimacy of these annexations, Hashi   sought official recognition from the Imperial 
Court at Nanjing, which he promptly received.   In the following decades, Shō Hashi and his 
successors took to the seas, conquering the   many gusuku of Yaeyama, Mikayo, Amami, and all 
the other inhabited islands of the archipelago.   For the first time in history, the Ryukyu 
islands were unified under the rule of one state:   the Ryukyu Kingdom, a polity which 
would endure for over 400 years.  In the halls of Shuri Castle, there once 
hung a magnificent bronze bell. Cast in   1458 during the reign of King Shō Taikyū, it 
features an inscription which reads as follows:   “The land of Ryukyu is a lovely place in the 
South Seas. An admirer of Korea’s excellence,   cheek-to-jaw with China, close as lips and 
teeth with Japan, this legendary island evokes   admiration in its neighbors. Traveling by ship, 
its people form a bridge between many countries,   filling its temples with the most precious 
goods and exotic products of foreign lands.”   At the height of its power, the Ryukyu Kingdom was 
a far eastern parallel to the merchant republic of   Venice: barely visible on a map, yet a leviathan 
of mercantile dominance at sea. During the reign   of the Shō Dynasty, Shuri Castle, the royal seat 
of the Kingdom, was transformed into a regal   palace in the Chinese style, a visual testament 
to the Ryukyu Kingdom’s commitment to emulating   the opulence of the Celestial Empire. Although 
the Kingdom’s aristocracy took the majority of   its cultural cues from Ming China, they adopted 
much from their other long-time trading partners   too. The monks of Japan and Korea led the 
way in popularizing the Buddhist faith in the   archipelago, with the grand temples of Enkaku-ji 
serving as the legacy of their contribution to   Ryukyu’s religious tapestry. Meanwhile, a pair 
of ‘Dragon Pillars,’ found at the entrance of the   royal castle and modeled after similar structures 
found in Cambodia and Thailand, indicate the   intimate impact that the vibrant cultures of 
South-East Asia had on the Ryukyuan social fabric.  The royal line of Ryukyu was full of many wild 
personalities. King Shō Toku, for example,   was a swashbuckling pirate king who spent his 
royal tenure as a seaborn corsair. He was known   for being an early adopter of gunpowder weaponry 
imported from China, and for being a devotee of   Hachiman, the Shinto god of war. During his 
reign, he took up the Mitsodomoe of Hachiman   as his personal banner, a symbol which became the 
royal crest of the Kingdom. However, the greatest   King of Ryukyu is unanimously considered to be Shō 
Shin, the third monarch of the second Shō dynasty.   Before his reign, regional Aji still held 
considerable power, and the Royal Court often   had to contend with uprisings launched by these 
agitated local warlords. Shin addressed this issue   by coaxing the Aji to come live at royal castle 
at Shuri, where he lavished them with material   luxury and social prestige, then confiscated 
their weapons. This effectively de-clawed   the tigers prowling the countryside by turning 
them into pampered house cats. In their place,   the islands were now administered by a 
properly centralized Royal government,   helmed by a caste of scholar-beuracrats 
educated in Chinese political philosophies.  Next on Shō Shin’s list of things to consolidate 
under state authority was religious life.   For many centuries, the Noro priestesses 
had wielded massive influence over the rural   peasantry. To bring these shamanesses into the 
fold, the Shō Shin established the institution   of the Kikoe-ōgimi, or High Priestess, 
to serve as temporal leader of the Noro.   The role of Kikoe-ōgimi was reserved 
for a woman of the royal family,   anchoring the islands’ ancient matriarchal 
cult to the royal line. Shō Shin’s reign   also presided over a golden age of literature 
and poetry in the indigenous Okinawan tongue,   a testament to the fact that although the Ryukyu 
Kingdom was a melting pot of cultural influence   from all over Asia, its rulers never lost sight of 
their own indigenous faith, language and customs.  While the Ryukyuan Kingdom was coasting through 
its golden age, the Empire of Japan had been in a   state of political anarchy, but by 1603, the land 
of the rising sun had been permanently glued back   together. When Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu finished 
his unification of the Land of the Gods, events   leading up to a Japanese invasion of the Ryukyu 
Kingdom was well underway. Back in 1592, when   Ieyasu’s predecessor, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, had been 
planning a grand conquest of Korea and China, he   demanded that the Ryukyuans send troops to bolster 
his invasion force. Not only had the reigning King   Shō Nei refused, but he also warned the Ming 
Emperor of Hideyoshi’s invasion plans. Despite   the fact that Ryukyu was a Chinese tributary, 
the rulers of Japan had always considered their   estranged island cousins to be within their sphere 
of influence. Therefore, this defiance was a sting   to Samurai pride, and increased the Shogunate’s 
resolve to bring the defiant nanto into the fold.  The Japanese Bakufu also saw the Ryukyu islands 
as a potential backdoor access to the riches of   the Middle Kingdom. When the Tokugawa regime came 
to power, they inherited a dismal relationship   with Ming China. Throughout the 1400s and 
1500s, Japan-based pirates had devestated   the Chinese coastline, Japanese Samurai had 
trashed a Chinese city over a trade dispute,   and, oh right, a Japanese dictator had tried 
to invade China through Korea. All this had,   understandably, compelled the Imperial Court at 
Nanjing to cut off formal relations with Japan,   severely limiting Japanese access to Chinese 
goods. In contrast, Chinese relations with   neighbouring Ryukyu remained peachy keen. So, 
schemed the Tokugawa Bakufu, if Nippon could   somehow seize control over the Ryukyu Kingdom 
without disrupting the island nations’s status   as a trading partner of the Chinese Empire, 
then the islands could essentially be used as   geopolitical money laundering scheme to illicitly 
funnel Chinese wealth onto Japanese shores.  In the year 1609, Shogun Toyotomi Hidetada charged 
his vassals, the Shimazu Clan of Satsuma Domain,   with the task of subjugating the Royal House 
of Shō. Being located on the southern tip of   Kyushu isle, the Shimazu had long been both a 
regular trading partner and a fierce political   rival of the Okinawan domain, making them 
intimately familiar with their enemy.   Moreover, the Samurai levies of Satsuma Domain 
were a battle hardened bunch, many of whom   veterans of Hideyoshi’s invasion of Korea. In 
the end, it was a quick campaign. Although the   Samurai of Satsuma encountered ardent resistance 
from Amami to Tokunoshima to Okinawa, the spears,   bows and Chinese-style firearms wielded by the 
Nanto were no match for the modern, European-style   muskets wielded by the ruthlessly disciplined 
invaders. In the end, it took only two months   for the Samurai to seize Shuri Castle and capture 
King Shō Nei. Thereafter, the Ryukyu Kingdom was   the possession of the Daimyo of Satsuma Domain.
As we recall, one of the main reasons that   Edo had greenlit this invasion was to use the 
Ryukyus to sneak Chinese products into Japan.   However, if the Imperial Court of Ming found out 
that their long time tributary vassals of Ryukyu   were now a Japanese possession, they would likely 
cut off trade with the islands. Thus, the Shimazu   occupiers came up with a hair-brained scheme: to 
keep their conquest of the Ryukyu Kingdom a secret   from China. To that end, the Ryukyu Kingdom 
was allowed to continue existing, and the Shō   Dynasty was allowed to continue ruling, albeit 
as a puppet attached to Satsuma strings. Next,   elaborate steps were taken to make sure that 
the Chinese would not find out who was really in   charge. When Chinese traders arrived on Okinawan 
shores, anything that displayed a Japanese name,   such as a book, was hidden. If a Satsuma man 
was spoken to in Japanese by a Chinese official,   he had to pretend that he did not understand. 
Moreover, native Ryukyuans were forbidden from   adopting Japanese names, clothes, or customs. This 
absurd arrangement had the effect of preserving   Ryukyuan culture from Japanese assimilation. 
After all, since the Satsuma clan insisted   on maintaining the illusion that the Ryukyu 
Kingdom was definitely, totally not a Japanese   puppet-state, it had a vested interest in making 
its people appear as non-Japanese as possible.  According to folk legend, it is during this era 
where the origin of Okinawan martial arts lies.   As a preventative measure against local uprisings, 
the Shimazu Samurai confiscated all weapons from   the native peasantry. The rural farmers of 
Okinawa, now defenseless, sought new ways to   protect themselves. With humble ingenuity, they 
turned everyday farming equipment into improvised   arms. Trowels, millstone handles, rice threshers 
and tenbin sticks eventually became Sai, Tonfas,   Nunchaku and Bo Staffs. The restriction on bearing 
arms also necessitated the adoption of unarmed   combat, resulting in the development of Karate. 
It should be noted that more recent historical   analyses claim it was not the Okinawan peasantry, 
but the native aristocracy, also forbidden from   publicly carrying weapons, who developed Okinawan 
Karate and kobudō. Either way, The Karate Kid,   Fists of Fury, and so many other classics of 
martial arts cinema owe many of their most   iconic scenes to Ryukyuan defiance and creativity.
By the 19th century, the world order of the far   east was changing. Having sailed into the 
East China sea with massive gunboats and   cratefuls of drugs, the Western World was the 
master of Asia now. Japan was at a crossroads,   it could submit, just as China had after the Opium 
wars, or it could adapt. Japan chose the latter,   and underwent the single most successful 
national modernization projects ever achieved.   As the Meiji government abolished the country’s 
feudal domains and placed them in the hands of the   central government, they began to look upon the 
Ryukyu Kingdom as nothing more than an antiquated   relic which had to be brought into the modern 
age. This came to fruition in 1879, when the   Ryukyu Kingdom was dismantled, and its territories 
were fully incorporated into the Empire of Japan.  The following decades were hard times for the 
Ryukyuan people, who were turned into second-class   citizens in their own ancient homeland. Meaningful 
government positions on the islands were reserved   for mainland Japanese, and native Ryukyuan culture 
and languages were suppressed. Non-Japanese   influences on Ryukyuan society underwent forced 
erasure, while the native Noro priestesshood was   forced to assimilate into a standardized form 
of the Shinto faith mandated by the Imperial   Government. In state-sponsored schools, Ryukyuans 
were forced to speak only standard Japanese, and   students caught using a native Ryukyuan language 
were forced to wear a ‘dialect card’ around their   neck as a form of public humiliation. The Imperial 
Japanese occupation of the Ryukyus came to a head   in 1945, when a certain sleeping giant, filled 
with terrible resolve after an incident at Pearl   Harbour, arrived upon their shores. During one 
of the bloodiest clashes of the Second World War,   the Imperial Japanese Army forcefully conscripted 
thousands of native Ryukyuans and fed them into   the meat grinder. During the battle, using the 
Okinawan language was considered to be an act   of sedition, and anyone caught speaking it was 
labelled an American spy and summarily executed.   The Battle of Okinawa was an apocalypse. Over 
half of the island’s entire population perished,   and countless priceless historical 
monuments from the Ryukyu Kingdom,   including Shuri Castle, were completely destroyed.
After the A-Bombs dropped on Hiroshima and   Nagasaki, many Japanese colonies, such as Korea 
and Taiwan, regained their independence, but the   Ryukyus did not. The islands were administered by 
a United States civil administration until 1972,   after which they were returned to Japan, to whom 
they belong to this day. Today, the lasting damage   of over a century of forced assimilation has 
taken its toll on the Ryukyuan people, most   of whom speak only standard Japanese rather than 
their indigenous tongues. However, despite their   many tribulations, the modern peoples of Okinawa, 
Yaeyama, Mikayo, Amami and all the other inhabited   islands of this storied archipelago have held 
true to their unique cultural identities. Thus,   in a fully democratized Japanese nation slowly 
becoming more receptive to protecting the cultures   of its indigenous peoples, there exists a future 
for the Ryukyuan people where their songs are   still sung, their customs still practiced, and the 
legacy of their Kingdom, a mercantile juggernaut   at the crossroads of Asia, is kept alive.
More videos on the history of East Asia are   on the way, so make sure you are subscribed 
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