Misplaced Pages

Kamegawa Seibu

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
In this Okinawan name, the surname is Kamegawa.
Kamegawa Seibu
亀川 盛武
sanshikan of Ryukyu
In office
1871–1872
Preceded byYonabaru Ryōkyō
Succeeded byUrasoe Chōshō
Personal details
Born1808
Ryukyu Kingdom
Died13 November 1880
Shuri, Okinawa, Empire of Japan
Chinese nameMō Inryō (毛 允良)
RankUeekata

Kamegawa Ueekata Seibu (亀川 親方 盛武, 1808 – 13 November 1880), also known by the Chinese-style name Mō Inryō (毛 允良), was a politician and bureaucrat of Ryukyu Kingdom.

Kamegawa was selected as a member of the Sanshikan in 1871, but was forced to retire by Japan in the next year because he was strongly pro-Chinese.

After Ryukyu was annexed by Japan in 1879, Kamegawa Seibu became the chief leader of anti-Japanese factions. He sent his grandson Kamegawa Seitō (亀川 盛棟, also known as Mō Yūkei 毛 有慶) to Fuzhou to request China negotiate it with Japan. In the next year, Seitō came back to Shuri and spread rumors that Chinese troops would come to liberate Ryukyu soon. The Kamegawa family was arrested by police, and tortured in the prison. Seibu was released on 3 November, but died ten days later.

References

  • "Kamegawa Seibu." Okinawa konpakuto jiten (沖縄コンパクト事典, "Okinawa Compact Encyclopedia").
Political offices
Preceded byYonabaru Ryōkyō Sanshikan of Ryukyu
1871 - 1872
Succeeded byUrasoe Chōshō
Sanshikan
Chūkaban
(丑日番)
Shikaban
(巳日番)
Yūkaban
(酉日番)
Others
Categories: