Higashionna Kanjun

Higashionna Kanjun (東恩納寛惇) also Higaonna Kanjun (1882–1963) was a Japanese scholar who specialized in the history of Okinawa. Alongside Iha Fuyū and Majikina Ankō (真境名安興), he is considered one of the pioneers of modern Okinawan studies. After reading Japanese history at Tokyo Imperial University, where he wrote his dissertation on the approach of the Shimazu clan towards the Ryūkyū Kingdom, his subsequent career included posts at Hosei University and Takushoku University and travels in Southeast Asia and India. His extensive body of writings, collected as Higashionna Kanjun zenshū (東恩納寬惇全集) in ten volumes, centre around Ryukyuan history and culture, personal and place names, and classics such as the Omoro Sōshi. His private collection of documents and historical materials, numbering some 3,384 items, is preserved as the Higashionna Kanjun Collection at Okinawa Prefectural Library.[1][2][3]

Higashionna Kanjun
東恩納寛惇
Higashionna with his wife and Iha Fuyū
Born14 October 1882
Naha, Ryūkyū Kingdom
Died24 January 1963
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationScholar and writer (Okinawan culture and history)

See also

References

  1. 東恩納寛惇文庫 [Higashionna Kanjun Collection] (in Japanese). Okinawa Prefectural Library. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  2. 東恩納寛惇 [Higashionna Kanjun]. Kokushi Daijiten (in Japanese). Yoshikawa Kobunkan. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  3. Namimatsu Nobuhisa (2011). 東恩納寛惇と沖縄史学の展開 [Kanjun Higaonna and the Development of Okinawa Historical Study]. Kyoto Sangyo University essays. Humanities series (in Japanese). Kyoto Sangyo University. 43 (3): 14–46.
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