List of Famous people named Sho
Sho Sasaki
Sho Sasaki is a Japanese football player who plays for Sanfrecce Hiroshima.
Sho Kamimura
Sho Kamimura is a former Japanese football player.
Sho Ito
Sho Ito is a Japanese football player who plays for Japanese team Kashima Antlers and represented Japan's under-20 team at the 2006 AFC Youth Championship.
Shō Tai
Shō Tai was the last king of the Ryukyu Kingdom and the head of the Ryukyu Domain. His reign saw greatly increased interactions with travelers from abroad, particularly from Europe and the United States, as well as the eventual end of the kingdom and its annexation by Japan as Ryukyu Domain. In 1879, the deposed king was forced to relocate to Tokyo. In May 1885, in compensation, he was made a Kōshaku, the second tier of nobility within the Kazoku peerage system.
Sho Kimura
Sho Kimura is a Japanese professional boxer who held the WBO flyweight title from 2017 to 2018.
Sho Iwasaki
Sho Iwasaki is a Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball.
Sho Yano
Sho Timothy Yano is an American physician. Yano is a former child prodigy and has an estimated IQ of 200.
Shō Ten
Shō Ten was the last crown prince of the Ryukyu Kingdom . He lost that title upon the abolition of the kingdom and the forced abdication of the king, his father, Shō Tai, in 1879, and later succeeded to the title of Marquess in the kazoku peerage following his father's death in 1901.
Shō Hashi
Shō Hashi was a ruler of Okinawa Island who was given the title of King of Chūzan of Ryūkyū. He unified the island by annihilating the Kings of Sannan, King of Chūzan, and Sannan.
Shō Shō
Shō Shō , was the head of the Shō family, the former Ryukyuan royal family, and upon his father's death in 1920, he became head of the family and inherited the title of Marquess. Like most members of the kazoku system of peerage, and all heads of the Shō family since the abolition of the Ryukyu Kingdom, he lived in Tokyo for his whole life. He died in June 1923, and was succeeded by his son, Hiroshi Shō.