New Books in East Asian Studies

Gregory Smits, "The Ryukyu Islands: A New History from the Stone Age to the Present" (U Chicago Press, 2026)

Mar 30, 2026
Gregory Smits, a Penn State historian who specializes in Ryukyuan history, walks through 35,000 years of island life. He explores migrations and archaeological evidence. He reframes Ryukyu as part of maritime East Asia and traces the rise, transformations, and external pressures on the Ryukyu polity. He also covers modern occupation, identity, and ongoing geopolitical and environmental challenges.
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INSIGHT

Ryukyu Kingdom Was Three Different States

  • The so-called Ryukyu Kingdom was three distinct political entities: trade-centric polities (c.1372–1500), a centralized Shuri empire (c.1530–1609), and a Satsuma-dominated theatrical state (post-1609).
  • Smits calls the post-1609 polity a theatrical state that preserved a facade of independence to serve Satsuma's interests while extracting tribute and resources.
INSIGHT

Ryukyu Centered The East China Sea Network

  • The Ryukyu Islands were integral to East China Sea maritime networks, acting as traders, pirates, and conduits between Korea, Kyushu, China and beyond.
  • Archaeology (kilns, trade sherds) and Wako maritime activity show Ryukyu was embedded in regional sealanes, not isolated.
INSIGHT

Korean Technology And Ritual Shaped Gusuku And Groves

  • Korean influence shaped key Ryukyuan features: kiln technology, military gusuku masonry, and sacred grove religious forms originating from coastal southern Korea and Jeju.
  • Smits links Korean technicians at Tokunoshima kilns and Korean-style mountain fortress masonry to Ryukyuan gusuku architecture.
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