last revised: February 19, 2004

Prehistoric and Historic Chronology:
The Okinawan/Ryukyuan Archipelago


Dates Mainland
Periods
Okinawa Chronology Okinawa
Periods
Osumi-Tokara Amami Okinawa Miyako-Yaeyama
1868 Modern Kagoshima Prefecture Okinawa Prefecture Modern
1600 Early Modern Satsuma-Han Ryukyu-koku Early Modern
1573 Azuchi-
Momoyama
  Ryukyu Kingdom
ca. 12th-16th centuries
Gusuku
Period
1392 Muromachi  
1185 Kamakura  
794 Heian         Late
 
Shellmound
 
Period
IV
710 Nara        
300 Kofun        
  Yayoi Late Kyushu Yayoi Kyushu Yayoi &
Amami-Okinawa
Culture
  III
A.D.
0-
B.C.
Middle Amami-Okinawa &
Philippine Cultures
II
300 Early I
1000 Jomon Latest Kyushu Jomon &
Amami-Okinawa
Culture
Kyushu Jomon &
Amami-Okinawa
Culture
  Early
 
Shellmound
 
Period
V
2000 Late Kyushu Jomon Miyako-Yaeyama
Culture
IV
3000 Middle   III
5000 Early   II
8000 Earliest Kakoinohara Ax Kakoinohara Ax   I
10,000 Incipient    
13,000 Palaeo-
lithic
IV-III         Palaeolithic
20,000 II   Amami
Palaeolithic
Upper Minatogawa
ca. 14,000 BP
--------
Shimojibaru Cave
ca. 15,000-16,000 BP
--------
Minatogawa
ca. 18,000 BP
 
30,000 I     Yamashita-cho
ca. 32,000 BP
Pinza'abu Cave
ca. 26,000 BP
  1. There are two large gaps in the occupation of the main Okinawan islands. The first gap begins with the final phases of the Palaeolithic and ends with the oldest radiocarbon date of ca. 6700 BP (uncalibrated). The second gap is from the 4th century to the 10th or 11th century.

  2. The occupation of the southern islands, the Miyako and Yaeyama groups, can be divided into four periods (Takamiya 1991, pp. 35-40):
    1. non-ceramic with polished and partially polished axes, and dates ranging from 2200 BP (radiocarbon uncalibrated) to AD 1010 (historic).
    2. Shimo-Tabara type pottery, and uncalibrated radiocarbon dates ranging from 3850 to 3260 BP. The order of phases 1 and 2 is questionable.
    3. Nakamori type pottery and Chinese trade ceramics, dating probably to the 13th-16th centuries, comtemporary with the Gusuku Period.
    4. The 17th and 18th centuries, affiliated with Japan.


Modern Okinawa 1879 to present Meiji 12th year the han (daimyo fiefs) were eliminated and the ken (prefecture) established.
Early Modern Ryukyu 1609 to 1879 Shimatsu invasion brought the Ryukyu Kingdom into the baku-han (shogunate-daimyo fief) system, but the kingdom remained somewhat independent.
Old Ryukyu ca. 12th c. to 1609 Period of the independent Ryukyu Kingdom. This kingdom encompassed the Amami, Okinawa, Miyako and Yaeyama island groups. It probably began about the late 14th century. This roughly parallels the archaeological Gusuku Period, from about the 12th or early 13th century to about the 15th or 16th century.
Prehistoric Period Palaeolithic to ca. AD 12th c. Palaeolithic sites are found in the archipelago, but then there is a gap to about 6600 BP, when a Jomon-like culture spreads over the islands from the main Okinawa island to Kyushu. A Yayoi-like culture existed in the same area from the middle of the 1st millennium BC until some unknown time in the 4th century AD or later. There is no Kofun Period in the Ryukyu archipelago. Little is known of the prehistory of the Miyako and Yaeyama island groups, but the prehistoric cultures there derived from Taiwan.


References