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Ryuho Ryuho is a proper name and term appearing in several East Asian linguistic, cultural, and religious contexts, associated with personal names, place names, and ritual usage. It appears across Japanese, Chinese, and Korean sources and has been recorded in historical chronicles, literary works, and modern media. The term surfaces in connections to dynastic histories, Buddhist practices, and contemporary popular culture.
The etymology traces to Sino-Japanese readings of kanji characters used in Old Japanese and Classical Chinese texts, drawing on phonetic developments documented in studies of Middle Chinese, Late Old Japanese, and Heian period philology. Pronunciations vary in Standard Japanese, Kansai dialect, and historical reconstructions used in Historical linguistics; reconstructions reference comparative data from Man'yōgana, Kanbun, and reconstructions by scholars associated with Kyoto University and University of Tokyo. Usage in Hangul-rendered Korean sources appears alongside entries in Joseon dynasty genealogies and transliterations found in Korean language scholarship. Variants correspond to character choices that appear in compilations such as the Nihon Shoki and the Shoku Nihongi.
The name appears in regional annals, temple registries, and maritime logs compiled during the Nara period and Kamakura period, showing up in records of pilgrimage routes linking sites similar to Kumano Hongū Taisha, Koyasan, and Ise Grand Shrine. It is attested in merchant ledgers tied to trade networks connecting Nagasaki, Naha, and Hiroshima during the Edo period and in mission reports exchanged with emissaries to Ryukyu Kingdom and Ming dynasty envoys. Literary references occur in anthologies such as the Kokin Wakashū and later in Edo period woodblock-printed collections parallel to works by Matsuo Bashō and Ihara Saikaku. Inscriptions bearing the name have been cataloged in temple stele surveys conducted by scholars affiliated with the National Diet Library and museums like the Tokyo National Museum and the Kyoto National Museum.
Historical figures with the name appear in biographical registers linking to courts and clerical hierarchies referenced in sources about Fujiwara clan patronage, Minamoto no Yoritomo-era documents, and monk rosters of Enryaku-ji. Modern individuals bearing the name feature in municipal records of cities such as Tokyo, Osaka, and Sapporo and have appeared in professional rosters of institutions including the Japan Self-Defense Forces, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, and universities like Waseda University and Keio University. Some contemporary persons with the name have careers intersecting with organizations like NHK, Shueisha, and Kadokawa Corporation or have been cited in coverage by outlets such as Asahi Shimbun, Yomiuri Shimbun, and Mainichi Shimbun.
The term is found in ritual manuals and liturgical lists associated with sects tracing lineages to Tendai, Shingon, and later Nichiren movements, appearing on pilgrimage talismans alongside stations on routes like the Shikoku Pilgrimage. It features in hagiographies collected with biographies of clerics linked to Saichō, Kūkai, and monk-scholars recorded in monastic histories of Tōdai-ji and Hōryū-ji. Mythological usages occur in local legends documented by folklorists in prefectures such as Aomori, Nagasaki Prefecture, and Okinawa Prefecture, where compiled lore parallels entries in the Kojiki and regional gazetteers produced by Meiji era prefectural offices.
The name appears as character names and place-names in modern manga and anime serialized by publishers like Shueisha and Kodansha and adapted by studios such as Studio Ghibli-affiliated artists and independent creators. It is used in video game credits for franchises produced by Nintendo, Square Enix, and Bandai Namco Entertainment and surfaces in film credits distributed by companies like Toho Company, Ltd. and Toei Company. The name has been adopted by musical acts represented by labels such as Avex Group and by performers appearing on broadcasts like Music Station and streaming platforms including Netflix Japan. It also appears in fan communities on platforms akin to Pixiv and in metadata for works cataloged by the National Diet Library Digital Collections.
Category:Japanese names Category:East Asian culture