Sai of Wa (済) was a king of Wa in the middle of the 5th century (Kofun era).[1] He was also known as Wa Osai.[1]
Sai of Wa | |||||
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King of Wa | |||||
Predecessor | Chin of Wa | ||||
Successor | Ko of Wa | ||||
Issue | Ko of Wa, Bu of Wa | ||||
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Genealogy of Emperors in Nihon Shoki
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Father of Ko and Wu, he was one of the Wa. He is considered to be the 19th Emperor Ingyo.
Records
editBook of Liang
edit- The Biography of Liang
- In the Book of Liang, the article on "Yamato" (梁書倭伝) states that his son Je stood up after the death of "Ya", and his son Xing stood up after his death.[2]。
History of the Southern Dynasties
editIn the History of the Southern Dynasties, the article on the Japanese Kingdom (Nan shi wagu den) describes the contents of the Song Shu Chronicles.
Year | Goguryeo | Baekje | Wa |
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317 | Eastern Jin | ||
372 | Geunchogo of Baekje | ||
386 | Jinsa of Baekje | ||
413 | Jangsu of Goguryeo | ||
416 | Jangsu of Goguryeo | Jeonji of Baekje | |
420 | Liu Song dynasty | ||
Jeonji of Baekje | |||
421 | San of Wa | ||
438 | Chin of Wa | ||
443 | Sai of Wa | ||
451 | Sai of Wa | ||
457 | Gaero of Baekje | ||
462 | Ko of Wa | ||
463 | Jangsu of Goguryeo | ||
478 | Bu of Wa | ||
479 | Southern Qi | ||
Bu of Wa | |||
480 | Jangsu of Goguryeo | Moudu | |
490 | Dongseong of Baekje | ||
494 | Munjamyeong of Goguryeo | ||
502 | Liang dynasty | ||
Munjamyeong of Goguryeo | Dongseong of Baekje | Bu of Wa |
Historical investigation
editOn the continuity between Je and Chin
editIn the article in the Sung Shu, Je takes the surname "Wa" (倭) as did the previous Japanese king Jin, but does not clarify his relationship to Jin. Since they do not name the continuation, there is a theory that Je and Chin were not close blood relatives, and since the Nihon Shoki shows a struggle in the succession to the throne after Emperor Nintoku, the possibility of the existence of such a struggle over the throne is pointed out [4] In addition, since the Wazui can be seen as a particularly powerful royal family in the Chin period, there is a theory that there were two royal forces at that time (Mozu Kofun Cluster and Furuichi Kofun Cluster), and that Je may have been a lineage of this Wazui [4]。
Comparison of the tombs
editDuring the period of activity of the Five kings of Wa, the tombs of the great kings were constructed in the Mozu Tombs and Furuichi Kofun Cluster (Osaka Prefecture, Sakai City, Habikino City, Fujiidera), and Je's tomb is assumed to be one of them.[5] These tombs are now designated as mausoleums by the Miyouchi Agency, so there is a lack of archaeological data to date them, but one theory compares them to the Ichinoyama Kofun (the current imperial tomb of Emperor Ingyo).
Another archaeological source is the "Gift of Wang" excavated from the Inaridai Kofun Group (Ichihara City, Chiba Prefecture). (or Chin), since he is self-explanatory only by writing "Wang".[6][7] It should be noted, however, that the iron sword from Inariyama burial mound inscription and the iron sword from Etafuneyama burial mound inscription are distinct from the "Great King" of the Inariyama Sword[4]。
References
edit- ^ a b 倭王済(日本人名大辞典).
- ^ 井上秀雄 (1974-12-01). 東アジア民族史 1-正史東夷伝. 東洋文庫264. 平凡社. pp. 315–319. ISBN 4582802648.
- ^ Mori, Kimiyuki; 森公章 (2010). Wa no Goō : 5-seiki no Higashi Ajia to Waō gunzō (1-han ed.). Tōkyō: Yamakawa Shuppansha. ISBN 978-4-634-54802-2. OCLC 609537044.
- ^ a b c 河内春人 2018, pp. 73–119.
- ^ "Wa" no Monogatari (Headquarters Committee for the Promotion of the Mozu and Furuichi Tumulus Group World Cultural Heritage Registration, "Mozu and Furuichi Tumulus Group")
- ^ Mori Kosho 2010, pp. 51–55.
- ^ Kouchi Haruhito 2018, pp. 73–119.
Bibliography
edit- 事典類
- その他文献
- 森公章 (2010). 倭の五王 5世紀の東アジアと倭王群像(日本史リブレット 人 002). 山川出版社. ISBN 978-4634548022.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - 河内春人 (2018). 倭の五王 -王位継承と五世紀の東アジア-(中公新書2470). 中央公論新社. ISBN 978-4121024701.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - 石井正敏 (June 2005). "5世紀の日韓関係 - 倭の五王と高句麗・百済 -" (PDF). 日韓歴史共同研究報告書(第1期). 日韓歴史共同研究. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-18.
- 森公章 (2010). 倭の五王 5世紀の東アジアと倭王群像(日本史リブレット 人 002). 山川出版社. ISBN 978-4634548022.
See also
editExternal links
edit- 漢籍電子文献資料庫 - 台湾中央研究院