Also known as Tama Udun
is one of the three royal mausoleums of the Second Shō Dynasty of kings of the Ryukyu Kingdom, along with Urasoe yōdore at Urasoe Castle and Izena Tamaudun near Izena Castle in Izena, Okinawa. The mausoleum is located in Shuri, Okinawa, and was built in 1501 by King Shō Shin, the third king (reigned 1477–1527), to bury his father, King Shō En a short distance from Shuri Castle. The Tamaudun complex was designated a National Historic Site in 1972. It was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO on December 2, 2000, as a part of the site group Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom
玉陵(琉球語:霊御殿/タマウドゥン Tamaudun),又稱玉御殿或靈御殿,是琉球國第二尚氏王朝歷代國王的陵墓。位于現沖繩縣那霸市首里。1501年(明弘治十四年),第三代國王尚真王(1477年至1526年在位)為改葬其父尚圓王而修建。1972年被指定为“史迹”;2018年被指定为“国宝”。目前玉陵已經被列為世界遺產,是琉球最大的破風墓。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
3 mapped locations
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).