Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Shō Iku

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Reign
  
1835–1847

Successor
  
Sho Tai

Concubine
  
Mafee Aji

Role
  
Sho Ko\'s son

Parents
  
Sho Ko

Grandchildren
  
Sho Jun, Sho Ten

Predecessor
  
Sho Ko

Spouse
  
Sashiki Aji-ganashi

Name
  
Sho Iku

Died
  
1847

Children
  
Sho Tai

Grandparents
  
Sho Tetsu

Sho Iku httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Born
  
19 August 1813 (
1813-08-19
)

Issue
  
See list Sho Jun, Crown Prince Nagagusuku Sho Tai, Crown Prince Nagagusuku Sho Hitsu, Nakijin Choshiki Manabetaru, Princess Kokuba Maushigane, Princess Suekichi Onmamatsugane, Princess Uema Princess Kanegusuku (Kochi Chojo\'s wife) Makadotaru, Princess Teruya

Similar People
  
Sho Tai, Sho Jun, Sho En

Shō Iku (尚 育, 1813–1847) was a king of the Ryukyu Kingdom from 1835 to 1847. He was the eldest son of Shō Kō. According to Chūzan Seifu (中山世譜), he was appointed Sessei (摂政) in 1828, in place of his ailing father who was supposedly afflicted by a mental illness. Shō Kō died in 1834, and Shō Iku was installed as the king.

Shō Iku httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Shō Iku was a Confucian scholar, and had dedicated his life to education. But during his reign, the financial crisis grew more and more serious. When a French ship arrived in Naha in 1844, Ryukyu was forced to trade with France. It was the first contact with Western countries. Théodore-Augustin Forcade, a French priest sent by Paris Foreign Missions Society, came to Ryukyu to spread the Christian Gospel. Bernard Jean Bettelheim, a British Protestant missionary, also arrived in Ryukyu in 1846. Bettelheim established the first foreign hospital on the island at the Naminoue Gokoku-ji Temple.

The king died in 1847, and his second son Shō Tai succeeded him as the last king of the Ryukyu Kingdom.

References

Shō Iku Wikipedia