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Subject Topic: LIST OF EMPERORS (660BC - PRESENT) Post ReplyPost New Topic
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JKO_RONIN
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Joined: 11 December 2004
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Posted: 28 March 2005 at 8:44am | IP Logged Quote JKO_RONIN


<1>   JINMU (660 b.c.-585 b.c.)
<2>   SUIZEI (581 b.c.-549 b.c.)
<3>   ANNEI (549 b.c.-511 b.c.)
<4>   ITOKU (510 b.c.-477 b.c.)
<5>   KOUSHOU (475 b.c.-393 b.c.)
<6>   KOUAN (392 b.c.-291 b.c.)
<7>   KOUREI (290 b.c.-215 b.c.)
<8>   KOUGEN (214 b.c.-158 b.c.)
<9>   KAIKA (158 b.c.-98 b.c.)
<10> SUJIN (97 b.c.-30 b.c.)
<11> SUININ (29 b.c.-70 b.c.)
<12> KEIKOU (71 b.c.-130 b.c.)
<13> SEIMU
<14> CHUUAI (192 - 200)
<15> OUJIN (270 - 310)
<16> NINTOKU
<17> RICHU
<18> HANZEI
<19> INGYOU
<20> ANKOU
<21> YUUCHAKU
<22> SEINEI
<23> KENSOU
<24> NINKEN
<25> BURETSU
<26> KEITAI (507-531)
<27> ANKAN (531-535)
<28> SENKA (535-539)
<29> KINMEI (539-571)
<30> BIDATSU(572-585)
<31> YOUMEI (585-587)
<32> SUSHUN (587-592)
<33> SUIKO (592-628)*
<34> JYOMEI (629-641)
<35> KOUGYOKU (642-645)*+
<36> KOUTOKU (645-654)
<37> SAIMEI (655-661)*+
<38> TENJI (668-671)
<39> KOUBUN (671-672)
<40> TENMU (673-686)
<41> JITOU (690-697)*
<42> MONMU (697-707)
<43> GENMEI (707-715)*
<44> GENSHOU (715-724)*
<45> SHOUMU (724-749)
<46> KOUKEN (749-758)*
<47> JUN-NIN (758-764)
<48> *SHOUTOKU (764-770)
<49> KOU-NIN(770-781)
<50> KANMU (781-806)
<51> HEIZEI (806-809)
<52> SAGA (809-823)
<53> JUN-NA (823-833)
<54> NINMYOU (833-850)
<55> MONTOKU (850-858)
<56> SEIWA (858-876)
<57> YOUZEI (876-884)
<58> KOUKOU (884-887)
<59> UDA (887-897)
<60> DAIGO (897-930)
<61> SUZAKU (930-946)
<62> MURAKAMI (946-967)
<63> REIZEI (967-969)

<64>  EN-YU (969-984)
<65>  KAZAN (984-986)
<66>  ICHIJYOU (986-1011)
<67>  SANJYOU (1011-1016)
<68>  GOICHIJYOU (1016-1036)
<69>  GOSUZAKU (1036-1045)
<70>  GOREIZEI (1045-1068)
<71>  GOSANJYOU (1068-1072)
<72>  SHIRAKAWA (1072-1086)
<73>  HORIKAWA (1086-1107)
<74>  TOBA (1107-1123)
<75>  SUTOKU (1123-1141)
<76>  KONOE (1141-1155)
<77>  GOSHIRAKAWA 1155-1158)
<78>  NIJYOU (1158-1165)
<79>  ROKUJYOU (1165-1168)
<80>  TAKAKURA(1168-1180)
<81>  ANTOKU (1180-1185)
<82>  GOTOBA (1183-1198)
<83>  TSUCHIMIKADO (1198-1210)
<84>  JUNTOKU (1210-1221)
<85>  CHUUKYOU (1221)
<86>  GOHORIKAWA (1121-1132)
<87>  SHIJYOU (1232-1242)
<88>  GOSAGA (1242-1246)
<89>  GOFUKAKUSA (1246-1259)
<90>  KAMEYAMA (1259-1274)
<91>  GOUDA (1274-1287)
<92>  FUSHIMI (1287-1298)
<93>  GOFUSHIMI (1298-1301)
<94>  GONIJYOU (1301-1308)
<95>  HANAZONO (1308-1318)

Southern Dynasty

Northern Dynasty

<96>  GODAIGO (1318-1339)
<97>  GOMURAKAMI (1339-1368)
<98>  CHOUKEI (1368-1383)
<99>  GOKAMEYAMA (1383-1392)
<96>   KOUGON (1331-1333)
<97>   KOUMYOU (1336-1348)
<98>   SUKOU (1348-1351)
<99>   GOKOUGON (1352-1371)
<100> GOENYUU (1371-1382)

<101> GOKOMATSU (1382-1412)
<102> SHOUKOU (1412-1428)
<103> GOHANAZONO(1428-1464)
<104> GOTSUCHIMIKADO (1464-1500)
<105> GOKASHIWABARA (1500-1526)
<106> GONARA (1526-1557)
<107> OOIMACHI (1557-1586)
<108> GOYOUZEI (1586-1611)
<109> GOMIZUNOO (1611-1629)
<110> MEISHOU (1629-1643)*
<111> GOKOUMYOU (1643-1654)
<112> GOSAI (1654-1663)
<113> REIGEN (1663-1687)
<114> HIGASHIYAMA (1687-1709)
<115> NAKAMIKADO (1709-1735)
<116> SAKURAMACHI (1735-1747)
<117> MOMOZONO (1747-1762)
<118> GOSAKURAMACHI (1762-1770)*
<119> GOMOMOZONO (1770-1779)
<120> KOUKAKU (1779-1817)
<121> NINKOU (1817-1846)
<122> KOUMEI (1846-1866)
<123> MEIJI (1867-1912)
<124> TAISHO (1912-1926)
<125> SHOWA (1926-1989)
<126> KINJYOU (Heisei)(1989 - present)
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JKO_RONIN
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Joined: 11 December 2004
Posts: 240

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Posted: 28 March 2005 at 8:51am | IP Logged Quote JKO_RONIN

Genealogy of the

Japanese Imperial Dynasty (Part I)

(From Emperor Jimmu to Emperor Kōkaku)

Below is a genealogical table of the reigning emperors (and six reigning empresses) of Japan and members of the Imperial Family. The Imperial Household recognizes one hundred twenty five legitimate monarchs since the ascension of Jimmu Tennō. Most historians regard the first fourteen emperors (Jimmu to Chuaji) as legendary figures. Many reference works and official Japanese government publications state that Jimmu ascended the throne in 660 BC. Archeological evidence suggests that this date is several centuries too early, even if Jimmu had been an actual person. The next thirteen emperors (Ojin to Senka) believed to have reigned between the early fifth and the early sixth centuries, are likely actual persons. Bidatsu Tennō (r. 539-572) is the first "historical" Japanese emperor.

The Japanese monarchs appear by their posthumous reign names (nengo), followed by their personal names (if known) in parentheses. The imperial court standardized the nengo in the late nineteenth century. The English transliterations vary in their spelling. When possible, I have tried to list all known English spellings of a particular monarch's personal name and posthumous name.

The reigning emperor, Heisei (Akihito), is the one hundred twenty-fifth monarch in the official chronology. The Japanese imperial dynasty owes its longevity to polygamy, endogamy, and intra-lineage adoption --- three practices that only ended in the Taishō period (1912-1926). The 1889 and 1947 Imperial Household Laws fix the succession on male descendants of the imperial line. In the event of a complete failure of the main line, the throne then passes to the nearest collateral branch, again in the male line. In light of this, descendants of female members of the Imperial Family beyond the first generation are not included, except when relevant to the history of the imperial institution. Thus, the descendants of Emperor Meiji and Emperor Showa's daughters are included. Although Japan has had six female Tennō, none of them passed the throne to their offspring.

The table does trace all male lines of descent from the reigning emperors. As explained elsewhere, from the eighth century to the Edo period, successive emperors practiced "dynastic shedding" as a means to control the size of the Imperial Family. The genealogies of the various Minamoto and Taira families are not included. During the Edo period, non-heir sons of an emperor generally entered the Buddhist priesthood. A 1907 amendment to the 1887 Imperial Household Law reintroduced a form of dynastic shedding by permitting non-heir ō to renounce their imperial status and become kazuko. The descendants of the "royal" kazuko do not appear.

Since the sixth century, the Japanese monarch has been styled Tenno, which means the "heavenly sovereign." Another term for the monarch is tenshi or  "the son of heaven." Both terms are gender neutral in Japanese. For the sake of convenience, I list the six female Tennō as empresses (regnant). The title kōgō, generally translated as empress, and the former ranks of nyogo and chugu, generally translated as "court lady" or "imperial consort of the second rank," refer exclusively to the consorts of Japanese emperors. The 1889 Imperial Household Law abolished the ranks of nyogo and chugu, and reserved the title and rank of kōgō for the emperor's lawful wife. The use of the English term "emperor" in reference to the Japanese monarch began in the mid-nineteenth century. The glossary discusses the distinction between shinnō (and naishinnō) and ō (nyoō). For the sake of simplicity, I refer to all members of the imperial blood as princes and princesses. When word [peer] follows the name of a prince it means that person held the rank of koshaku in the kazuko.

 

1.      JIMMU (Sanohiko), legendary descendent of Amaterasu Ōkami, the Shinto sun goddess, by her grandson Mikoto no Ninigi

2.      SUIZEI (Kamisama Gawa Mimino no Mikoto), son of Jimmu

3.      ANNEI (Sikitsuhiko Tama Demino no Mikoto), son of Suizei

4.      ITOKU (Oho Yamatohiko Suki Tomonau no Mikoto), son of Annei

5.      KŌSHŌ (Mina Tsuhiko Kaesineno no Mikoto), son of Itoku

6.      KŌAN (Oho Yamato Tarasihiko Kuniosi Hito no Mikoto), son of Kōshō

7.      KŌREI (Oho Yamato Nekohiko Futoni no Mikoto) son of Kōan

8.      KŌGEN (Oho Yamato Nekohiko Kuni Kurono no Mikoto), son of Kōrei

9.      KAIKA (Oho Wakai Yamato Nekohiko Oho Bibino no Mikoto), son of Kōgen

10.  SUJIN (Mimaki Irihiko Isatsi no Mikoto), son of Kaiki.

11.  SUININ (Ikume Irihiko Isatsi no Mikoto) son of Sujin.

12.  KEIKŌ (Oho Tarasihiko Osiwake no Mikoto), son of Suinin.

13.  SEIMU (Wakai Tarsihiko), son of Keikō.

14.  CHUAI (Tarasi Nakatsuhiko no Mikoto), nephew of Seimu.

15.  ŌJIN (Fondano Miko no Mikoto or Otomowake no Mikoto or Humudawake no Mikoto), son of Chuai.

16.  NINTOKU (Oho Sazaki no Mikoto), son of Ōjin

17.  RICHU (Isavo Wake no Mikoto), son of Nintoku

18.  HANZEI (Misu wa Wake no Mikoto), brother of Richu

19.  INGYŌ (Wo Atsumano Wakako no Sukune), brother of Richu

20.  ANKŌ (Anahono no Mikoto), son of Ingyō

21.  YURYAKU (Oho Hatsuneno no Mikoto), brother of Ankō.

22.  SEINEI (Siraga Takehiro Kuni Osi Wakai Yamato Neko no Mikoto), son of Yuryaku

23.  KENZŌ (Ohoke no Mikoto), grandson of the 14th Emperor Richu.

24.  NINKEN (Oho Ai Azana Simano Irakko), brother of Kenzō.

25.  BURETSU (Wo Fatsuse Wakai Sazaki), son of Ninken, r. 504-510.

26.  KEITI (Wo Ofu Atonohiko Fudo no Mikoto), great nephew of Richu,

27.  ANKAN (Hirokuni Osh*take Kanahi no Mikoto), son of Keiti

28.  SENKA (Takehi Hirokuni Osh*take no Mikoto), brother of Ankan

29.  KINMEI (Amekuni Oshiharaki Hironiwa no Mikoto), brother of Senka

30.  BIDATSU (Numakura Futotamshiki no Mikoto), b. 509 d. 571, r. 539-572; son of Kinmei; Bidatsu Tennō m. his half-sister Toroyora Miya (later Suiko Tennō)

31.  YŌMEI (Tachibana no Toyohi no Mikoto), b.? d. 587; r. 585-587; brother of Bidatsu, father of Prince Umayado, also known as Shōtuku-taishi, regent (sesshō).

32.  SUSHUN (Hatsusebe no Mikoto), b.? d. 592; r. 587-592; brother of Yōmei.

33.  SUIKA or Toyora miya (Toyomike Kashikiya Hime), b. 554 d. 628; r. 593-628; daughter of the 39th Tennō, Kinmei; half-sister and wife of Emperor Bidatsu; r. as Tennō (in her own right)

34.  JOMEI (Tamura or Okinagagatari Hironuka no Mikoto), b. 593 d. 641; r. 629-641; grandson of Bidatsu, son of Oshizakahikobitonōe.

35.  KŌGYOKU (Ame Tokyo Takara Mige Fi Tarsi Hime), b. 594 d. 661; r. 642-645; abdicated, and later r. a second time under the title Saimei, 655-661; daughter of Prince Chinu, a son of Oshizakahikobitonōe; m. her uncle, Emperor Jomei.

36.  KŌTUKU (Ame Yorodsu Toyohi no Mikoto), b. 597 d. 654, r. 645-654, brother of Prince Chinu and uncle of Empress Kōgyoku/Saimei.

37.  SAIMEI, see number 35 above

38.  TENCHI (Ame Hiraki Wake no Mikato), b. 626 d. 672; r. 661-672; originally named Prince Nakanōe; son of the 34th Emperor Jomei by Kōyoku.

39.  KŌBUN (Otomo), b. 648 d. 652, r. 672, son of Emperor Tenchi.

40.  TENMU (Ame nu Nake Vara Okino Mahito), b. ca. 631 d. 686, r. 672-686, son of the 34th Emperor Jomei.

41.  JITŌ (Take Ama Vara Hiro no Hime), b. 643 d. 703, r. 686-697, daughter of the 38th Emperor Tenchi.

42.  MONMU (Amanomo Mune Toyo), b. 683 d. 707, r. 697-707; son of Prince Kusakabe, and thus a grandson of the 40th Emperor Tenmu; m. Miyako, daughter of Fujiwara no Fuhito, udaijin (minister of the right).

43.  GENMEI (Yamato Neko Amatsu Mi Siro Toyo Kuni Nari Hime), b. 661 d. 722; r. 707-715; daughter of the 38th Emperor Tenchi.

44.  GENSHŌ (Yamato Neko Taka Mitsu Kio Tarasi Hime), b. 680 d. 748, r. 715-724; sister of the 42nd Emperor Monmu.

45.  SHŌMU (Ame Sirusi Kuni Osi Hiraki Toyo Sakura Hiko), b. 701 d. 756; r. 724-749; son of the 42nd Emperor Monmu; Shōmu m. Kōmyō, a daughter of Fujiwara no Fuhito, and had issue:

46.  KŌKEN (Takano Hime Abenno Nai Sin Wo), b. 718 d. 770, the daughter of Shōmu by Fujiwara no Kōmyō; r. 748-758, abdicated; r. a second time under the name Shotoku, 764-770.

47.  JUNNIN (Oho Ino Ohokimi), b. 733 d. 765; r. 758-764, abdicated; son of Toneri, a son of the 40th Emperor Temnu.

48.  SHOTOKU, r. 764-770 (see number 46 above)

49.  KŌNIN (Sira Kabena Ohokimi), b. 709 d. 782, r. 770-781, son of Shiki, a son of the 38th Emperor Tenchi. In 787 Emperor Kōnin instituted the practice of giving a surname, kabane, to non-heir imperial children, thereby demoting them to the non-royal aristocracy. His fifth son received the name of Hirone no Ason.

50.  KANMU or KWAMMU (Yamato Neko Suberagi Takarateru no Mikoto), b. 737 d. 806; r. 781-806; m. a daughter of Fujiwara no Momokawa, sangi (auditor), and had issue:

51.  HEIZI or HEIJŌ (Yamato Neko Amahiraki Kuni Takahiko), b. 774 d. 824, r. 806-809, son of Kanmu, abdicated and held the title dajo Tennō (retired emperor) from 809 until his death in 824.

52.  SAGA (Kami no Sinwo), b. 786 d. 842; r. 809-824; a brother of Heizi; abdicated and held the title dajo Tennō (retired emperor) from 809 until his death in 842. Emperor Saga had at least twenty-three sons and twenty-seven daughters, by twenty-nine known consorts. By 814 he created five of his sons shinnō (imperial princes)and twelve of his daughters naishinnō (imperial princesses). His son Atsushi remained ō (prince of the blood) Saga's remaining offspring received the name Minamoto no Ason and descended to subject status.

53.  JUNNA (Ohodomo no Sinwo), b. 786 d. 840; r. 824-834; half-brother of the 51st Emperor Heizi and of the 52nd Emperor Saga.

54.  NINMYŌ (Masa Yosi), b. 810, d. 850; r. 833-850, son of the 52nd Emperor Saga,

55.  MONTOKU (Mitsi Yasu Sin wo), b. 827, d. 859, r. 850-859, son of Emperor Nimyō.

56.  SEIWA (Korehito), b. 850, d. 880, r. 859-876, abdicated, dajo Tennō from 876 until his death in 880, son of Emperor Montoku. Emperor Seiwa's grandson, Tusenemoto (a son of Sadazumi-o), was the progenitor of the Seiwa-Genji clan.

57.  YŌZEI (Sadaaki), b. 868, d. 949, r. 876-885, abdicated, dajo Tennō from 885 until his death in 949, son of Emperor Seiwa.

58.  KŌKŌ (Tokiyasu), b. 830, d. 887, r. 884-887, son of the 54th Emperor Nimyo.

59.  UDA (Sadayoshi), b. 867, d. 931; r. 887-897, abdicated; dajo Tennō from 897 until his death in 931; son of the 58th Emperor Kōkō.

60.  DAIGO (Atsuhito), b. 885, d. 931, r. 887-931; m. a daughter of Fujiwara no Motosune, the dajōdaijin (minister of supreme affairs), and had issue:

61.  SUZAKU (Hiroakira), b. 923, d. 952, r. 930-947 (under the regency of Fujiwara no Tadahira), son of the 60th Emperor Daigo.

62.  MURAKAMI (Nariakira), b. 926 d. 968; r. 947-968; son of the 60th Emperor Daigo and a half-brother of the 61st Emperor Suzaku.

63.  REIZEI (Norihira), b. 950, d. 1011; r. 968-970, abdicated, dajo Tennō from 970 until his death in 1011; m. firstly, a daughter of Fujiwara no Koretada; m. secondly, a daughter of Fujiwara no Kaneie.

64.  ENYU (Morihira), b. 959, d. 991, r. 970-985, abdicated, dajo Tennō from 985 until his death in 991.

65.  KAZAN (Morosada), b. 968, d. 1008, r. 985-987; son of the 63rd Emperor Reizei

66.  ICHIJŌ (Kanehito), b. 980, d. 1012, r. 987-1010, son of the 64th Emperor Enyu; m. Akiko, the eldest daughter of Fujiwara no Michinaga and Minamoto no Rinshi; Akiko received the title kōgō.

67.  SANJŌ (Suesada), b. 976, d. 1017, r. 1012-1017; son of the 63rd Emperor Reizei by an imperial concubine; m. (in 1010) Kenshi, the second daughter of Fujiwara no Michinaga and Minamoto no Rinshi. Sanjō, however, denied Kenshi the title of kōgō.

68.  GO-ICHIJŌ (Atsunari), b. 1008, d. 1036, r. 1016-1036 under the regency of Fujiwara no Michinaga, the dajōdaijin (minister of supreme affairs) and the father-in-law of the previous two emperors. Son of the 66th Emperor Ichijō by Fujiwara no Shōshi. Go-Ichijō m. Toshiko, the third daughter of Fujiwara no Michinaga, who was styled chugu and bore him two daughters.

69.  GO-SUZAKU (Atsuyoshi), b. 1009, d. 1047, r. 1036-1045, son of the 66th Emperor Ichijō by Fujiwara no Shōshi, and thus a full-brother of the 68th Emperor Go-Ichijō. Emperor Go-Suzako m. Yoshiko, the fourth daughter of Fujiwara no Michinaga in 1025.

70.  GO-REIZEI (Tsikahito or Chikahito), b. 1025, d. 1068, r. 1045-1068, son of the 69th Emperor Go-Suzaku by Fujiwara no Yoshiko, and thus a grandson of Fujiwara no Michinaga. Emperor Go-Reizei m. Hiroko, a daughter of Fujiwara no Yorimichi, the kampaku and the elder son of Fujiwara no Michinaga. Hiroko, however, did not bear Go-Reizei a son.

71.  GO-SANJŌ (Takahito), b. 1034, d. 1073, r. 1068-1073, son of Emperor Go-Reizei by a non-Fujiwara concubine. Go-Sanjō was the first emperor since the 59th Emperor Uda who did not have a Fujiwara mother.

72.  SHIRAKAWA (Sadahito), b. 1053, d. 1129, r. 1073-1087, son of the 70th Emperor Go-Reizei and brother of the 71st Emperor Go-Sanjō.

73.  HORIKAWA (Yoshihito), b. 1079, d. 1107, r. 1087-1107, son of Emperor Shirakawa. Emperor Horikawa m. a daughter of Fujiwara no Sanesuke, udaijin (minister of the right); Adopted by the daughter of Fujiwara no Morozane, kanpuko (chancellor of the Imperial Court).

74.  TOBA (Munehito), b. 1103, d. 1156, r. 1107-1124, abdicated and held the title dajo Tennō until his death in 1156, son of Emperor Horikawa. Emperor Toba m. (1) Tamako (styled, Taikemmonin, b. 1101, d. 1145), a daughter of Fujiwara no Kinzane (Fujiwara no Michinaga's younger son), m. (2) Tokuko (styled Bifuku monin, b. 1117, d. 1160), a daughter of Fujiwara no Nagazine.

75.  SUTOKU (Akihito), b. 1119, d. 1164; r. 1124-1142, son of Emperor Toba by his first consort, Fujiwara no Tamako. Emperor Sutoku was forced to abdicate by his father, the retired Emperor Toba. Toba wished to see Tosh*to-o (the future Emperor Konoe) as emperor.

76.  KONOE (Tosh*to), b. 1139 d. 1156, r. 1141-1156, son of retired Emperor Toba by Fujiwara no Tokuko.

77.  GO-SHIRAKAWA (Masahito), b. 1127, d. 1192, r. 1155-1159, a grandson of the 72nd Emperor Shirakawa. Go-Shirawakawa m. a daughter of Minamoto no Arihito. Later m. Shigeko, a daughter of Taira no Tokinobu and a descendant (nine generations removed) of Tokamune, a younger son of the 50th Emperor Kanmu. He abdicated in favor of his eldest son, Prince Morihito (see Emperor Nijō). Styled dajo Tennō until his death in 1192;

78.  NIJŌ (Morihito), b. 1143, d. 1165, r. 1158-1165, a son of Emperor Go-Shirakawa by his Minamoto consort.

79.  ROKUJŌ (Toshihito), b. 1164, d. 1176, r. 1166-1169, son of Emperor Nijō.

80.  TAKAKURA (Norihito), b. 1161, d. 1181, r. 1168-1181, son of the 77th Emperor Go-Shirakawa and Taira no Shigeko. Emperor Takakura m. (1) 1167, Tokuko (styled Kenrei-monin, b. 1155, d. 1213), a daughter of Taira no Kiyomori, dajō daijin (minister of supreme affairs), the head of the Kanmu Heishi clan and a descendant of the 50th Emperor Kanmu; m. (2) Fujiwara no Masuko (styled Shichijō-in, d. 1228)

81.  ANTOKU (Kotohito), b. 1178, d. 1185, r. 1180-1185, son of Emperor Takakura by Taira no Tokuko, and thus a grandson of Taira no Kiyomori.

82.  GO-TOBA (Takanari), b. 1180, d. 1239, r. 1183-1199 (at Kyoto), abdicated and styled dajo tennōuntil his death in 1239. Son of Emperor Takakura by Fujiwara no Masuko, and a half-brother of Emperor Antoku. Exiled to Oki in 1221. [Note that the reigns of Go-Toba and Antoku overlap. Antoku fled Kyoto with the Taira, at which time the Minamoto installed Go-Toba as a rival emperor]. m. (1) Minamoto no Ariko (styled Shōmei monin), m. (2) Fujiwara no Shigeko, m. (3) Nishi-no-onkata; had issue:

1.      Prince Tamehito (see Emperor Tsuchimikado), 1st son.

2.      Prince Yorihito, 4th son, cr. Reizei-no-miya.

3.      Prince Morinari (see Emperor Juntoku), 6th son.

83.  TSUCHIMIKADO (Tamehito), b. 1195, d. 1231, r. 1199-1211, son of Emperor Go-Toba by Minamoto no Ariko, abdicated, 1211 and was styled dajo tennōuntil his death in 1231. m. Minamoto no Michiko, and had issue:

1.      Prince Kunihito, b. 1220, d. 1272 (see Emperor Go-Saga)

84.  JUNTOKU (Morinari), b. 1197, d. 1242, r. 1211-1221, exiled to Sado. Son of the 82nd Emperor Go-Toba by Fujiwara no Shigeko; half-brother of the 83rd Emperor Tsuchimikado; m. Fujiwara no Tachiko (styled Higashi-ichijō-in), had issue:

1.      Prince Tadanari, b. 1220, d. 1279, 1st son

2.      PrinceKanenori(see Emperor Chukyo below)

85.  CHUKYO (Kanenari), b. 1218, d. 1234, r. 1221 (for about seventy days), son of Emperor Juntoku by Fujiwara no Tachiko.

86.  GO-HORIKAWA (Toyohito), b. 1212 d. 1234, r. 1222-1234, son of Prince Morisada, a son of the 83rd Emperor Takakura.

87.  SHIJŌ (Hidehito), b. 1231 d. 1242, r. 1232-1243, son of Go-Horikawa.

88.  GO-SAGA (Kunihito), b. 1220 d. 1272, r. 1243-1247, son of the 83rd Emperor Tsuchimikado by Minamoto no Michiko.

89.  GO-FUKAKASA (Hisahito), b. 1243 d. 1304, r. 1247-1260, son of Go-Saga and full-brother of the 90th Emperor Kameyama. Founder of the Jimyōin line of the Imperial House. Abdicated in 1260 and styled dajo Tennō until his death in 1304. Had issue:

1.      Prince Hirohito, b. 1265 d. 1317 (see Emperor Fushimi below)

2.      Prince Hissakira, b. 1275, d. 1328, r. as shōgun, 1289-1308, abdicated.

1.      Prince Morikuni, b. 1301, d. 1333, r. as shōgun, 1289-1308, deposed.

90.  KAMEYAMA (Tsunehito), b. 1249, d. 1305, r. 1260-1275, son of Go-Saga and full-brother of Go-Fukakasa. Founder of the Daikakuji line of the Imperial House. Abdicated in 1275 and styled dajo Tennō until his death in 1305.

91.  GO-UDA (Yorihito), b. 1267, d. 1324, r. 1275-1288, son of the 90th Emperor Kameyama (Daikakuji). Had issue

1.      Prince Kuniharu (see Emperor Go-Nijō below), b. 1285, son of Go-Uda by Fujiwara no Tadako.

2.      Prince Takaharu (see Emperor Go-Daigo below), b. 1288,

3.      Prince Tsuenakira, b. 1302, d. 1351, son of Go-Uda by Shōkunmon-in (b. 1273, d. 1336), a daughter of Saijonji Sanekane (b. 1249, d. 1322).

92.  FUSHIMI (Hirohito), b. 1265 d. 1317, r. 1288-1299, son of the 89th Emperor Go-Fukakasa, head of the Jimyōin line.

93.  GO-FUSHIMI (Tanehito), b. 1288 d. 1336, r. 1299-1302, son of the 92nd Emperor Fushimi (Jimyōin); m. 1306, Saijonji Neishi (granted title Kōgimon-in, 1309; b. 1292, d. 1357), daughter of Sainoji Kinhara; Had issue:

1.      Prince Kazuhito, b. 1313, d. 1364 (see Northern Emperor Kōgon)

2.      Prince Toyohito, b. 1321, d. 1380.

94.  GO-NIJŌ (Kuniharu), b. 1285 d. 1308, r. 1301-1308, son of the 91st Emperor Go-Uda (Daikakuji); had issue:

1.      Prince Kuninaga (or Kuniyoshi), b. 1300, d. 1326, designated the Daikakuji crown prince to his uncle, Emperor Go-Daigo, 1319.

95.  HANAZONŌ (Tomihito), b. 1297 d. 1348, r. 1308-1319, abdicated; son of the 89th Emperor Go-Fukakasa (Jimyōin)

96.  GO-DAIGIO (Takeharu), b. 1288 d. 1339, r. 1319-1331, son of the 91st Emperor Go-Uda by Tadako, daughter of Fujiwara no Mototsugo, naidaijiin. Following the abdication of Go-Nijō (1308), the Hōjo designated Prince Takeharu crown prince, and thus heir apparent to his cousin, the new Emperor Hanazonō of the Jimyōin line. Succeeded Hanazono as emperor, 1319; Deposed in favor of Prince Kazuhito(Emperor Kōgen) of the Jimyōin line, 1331 (see northern emperors below); and exiled to Oki until 1333, restored 1333-1336, deposed a second time; exiled to Yoshino in 1336; restored 1336-1339 (south only). Emperor Go-Dagio had issue seventeen sons and fifteen daughters, including:

1.      Prince Takayoshi (or Takanaga), b. 1311, d. 1337, eldest son of Go-Daigo by Fujiwara no Tameko.

2.      Prince Yoyoshi

3.      Prince Muneyoshi (or Morinaga), b. 1311, d. 1382? Son of Go-Daigo by Minamoto no Chikako, daughter of Minamoto no Morochika; became a Buddhist priest under the title Son'un Hoshinnō and appointed a zasu (chief priest) of the Tendai sect; recalled to secular status, 1331; cr. Ōtō-no-miya and appointed shōgun by his father, 1333; deposed 1335.

4.      Princess Kwanshi, eldest daughter of Go-Daigo, married Prince Kazuhito (the northern Emperor Kōgon)

5.      Prince Moriyoshi (or Munenaga) b. 1308, d. 1335, son of Go-Daigo by Minamoto no Chikako; became a priest under the title Sochō Hoshinnō and appointed a zasu (chief priest) of the Tendai sect.

6.      Prince Tsuneyoshi, b. 1325, d. 1338, son of Go-Daigo by Fujiwara no Kadako (b. 1311, d. 1359)

7.      Prince Nariyoshi, b. 1326, d. 1344, son of Go-Daigo by Anno Rencshi

8.      Prince Noriyoshi (or Norinaga), b. 1328, d. 1368, son of Go-Daigo by Fujiwara no Kadako (see Emperor Go-Murakami below)

9.      Prince Kaneyoshi, b. 1329, d. 1383

97.  GO-MURAKAMI (Noriyoshi), b. 1328, d. 1368, r. 1339-1369 (south only), a son of the 96th emperor Go-Daigo (Daikakuji) by Fujiwara no Kadako (later styled Ano Benshi, b. 1311, d. 1359).

98.  CHŌKEI (Hironari), b. 1343, d. 1394, r. 1368-1383 (south only), son of the 97th Emperor Go-Murakami and a grandson of Go-Daigo.

99.  GO-KAMEYAMA (Hironari) b. 1347, d. 1414, r. 1371-1384 (south only), son of the 97th Emperor Go-Murakami and the younger brother of the 98th Emperor Chōkei. Abdicated and surrendered the shinki to the southern emperor Go-Komastu, 1883, granted title dajo Tennō.

100.                         GO-KOMATSU (Motohito), b. 1377, d. 1433; r. 1384-1413 (as northern emperor) and r. 1392-1413 (as sole emperor of Japan); son of the northern emperor Go-Enyu (see northern court below).

101.                         SHŌKŌ (Mihito), b. 1401, d. 1429, r. 1413-1429, son of the 100th Emperor Go-Komatsu. Shoko succeed his father at the age of 12 and d. at age 27, without issue. The throne passed to his third cousin, Prince Hikohiko, a great grandson of the northern emperor Sukō.

102.                         GO-HANAZONO (Hikohito), b. 1419, d. 1470, r. 1429-1465, elder son of Prince Sadafusa (b. 1372, d. 1457) and a great grandson of the northern emperor Sukō (Daikakuji). Go-Hanazono created his younger brother, Prince Satasune, 1st Fushimi-no-miya.

103.                         GO-TSUCHIMIKADO (Narihito), b. 1442, d. 1501, r. 1464-1501, son of Emperor Go-Hanazono.

104.                         GO-SHIWABARA (Katsuhito), b. 1464, d. 1527, r. 1501-1527, son of the 103rd Emperor Go-Tsuchimikado.

105.                         GO-NARA (Tomohito), b. 1496, d. 1558, r. 1527-1558, son of the 104th Emperor Go-Shiwabara.

106.                         OGIMACHI (Katahito), b. 1517, d. 1593, r. 1558-1587, son of the 105th Emperor Go-Nara.

1.      Prince Masahito, cr. 1st Katsura-no-miya, had issue

1.      Prince Masahito (see Emperor Go-Yozei below)

2.      Prince Tomohito, cr. 1st Hachijo-no-miya

107.                         GO-YŌZEI (Masahito), b. 1571, d. 1617, r. 1587-1612, grandson of the 106th Emperor Ogimachi. Go-Yozei had issue:

1.      Prince Masahito (future Emperor Go-Minoo)

2.      Prince Yoshihito, cr. 1st Takamatsu-no-miya, had issue

108.                        GO-MINOO (Masahito), b. 1596, d. 1680, r. 1612-1630; elder son of the 107th Emperor Go-Yozei and half-brother of Takamatsu-no-miya Yoshihito; Emperor Go-Minoo m. Tokugawa Kazuko, a daughter of Hidetada, the 2nd Tokugawa shōgun, and had issue:

1.      Prince Takahito (1621-1628)

2.      Princess Okiko (see 109th Empress Myōsu below)

3.      Prince Tsuguhito(see 110th Emperor Go-Kōmyō below)

4.      Prince Worihito (see 112th Emperor Reigen below)

5.      Serveral other children by various court ladies.

109.                         MYŌSHU (Okiko), b. 1623, d. 1696, r. 1630-1644, first empress regnant (or female Tennō) since Shōtuko (764-770).

110.                         GO-KŌMYŌ (Tsuguhito), b. 1633, d. 1655, r. 1644-1655, son of the 108th Emperor Go-Minoo, half-brother of the ex-Empress Myōshō.

111.                        GO-SAI (Yoshihito), b. 1637, d. 1685, r. 1655-1663, son of the 108th Emperor Go-Minoo, half-brother of the Empress regnant Myōshō and the 110th Emperor Go-Kōmyō. Had issue:

1.      Prince Arisugwara (Yukihito), succeeded as 2nd Arisugawa-no-miya, and had issue:

1.      Prince Arisugawa (Masahito)

2.      six generations of descendants to Prince Arisugawa (Takahito), b. 1812, d. 1886, m. Sakeki Yuko, and had issue (see EMPEROR KOMEI)

112.                         REIGEN (Worihito), b. 1654, d. 1732, r. 1663-1687, son of the 108th Emperor Go-Minoo, half-brother of the Empress Myōshō, the 110th Emperor Go-Kōmyo, and the 111th Emperor Go-Sai.

113.                         HIGASHIYAMA (Asahito), b. 1675, d. 1710, r. 1687-1710, son of the 112th Emperor Reigen. Higashiyama had issue:

1.      PrinceYoshihito (see 114th Emperor Nakimikado below)

2.      Prince Naohito, cr. 1st Kan'in-no-miya, had issue

1.      Prince Kan'in (Sukehito)

1.      Prince Tomohito (see the 119th Emperor Kōkaku below)

2.      Prince Kan'in (Haruhito), succeeded his father Prince Sukehito as 3rd Kan'in-no-miya; had issue

114.                         NAKAMIKADO (Yoshihito), b. 1701, d. 1737, r. 1709-1737, elder son of the 113th Emperor Higashiyama.

115.                         SAKURAMACHI (Akihito), b. 1720, d. 1750, r. 1737-1748.

1.      Prince Tōhito(see the 116th Emperor Monozono below)

2.      Prince Hidehito (see the 118th Emperor Go-Monozono below)

3.      Princess Toshiko(see the 117th Empress Go-Sakumachi below)

116.                         MONOZONO (Tōhito), b. 1741, d. 1763, r. 1748-1763, son of the 115th Emperor Sakuramachi. Monozono was the first emperor to die on the throne since Go-Komio, one hundred six years earlier. Had issue

1.      Prince Hidehito (see the 118th Emperor Go-Monozono below); At the time of Monozono's death, Hidehito was only five years old and there were no living ex-emperors.

117.                         GO-SAKURAMACHI (Toshiko), b. 1740, d. 1813, r. 1763-1771, daughter of the 115 Emperor Sakuramachi and sister of the 116th Emperor Monozono. Go-Sakuramachi was Japan's last female Tennō, to date. She abdicated in favor of her nephew, Hidehito.

118.                         GO-MONOZONO (Hidehito), b. 1758, d. 1780, r. 1771-1780, only son of the 116th Emperor Monozono. At the time of his death Go-Monozono had only one child, a ten-month-old daughter.

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Posted: 28 March 2005 at 8:54am | IP Logged Quote JKO_RONIN

he Emperor of Japan and Members of the Imperial Family

 

 

The Emperor and the Empress of Japan

 

His Imperial Majesty AKIHITO, the 125th Emperor of Japan, Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, Order of the Rising Sun, Order of the Sacred Treasure, KG (Great Britain), Grand Cross of the Order of. St. Olav (Norway), the elder son of the late Emperor Shôwa (Hirohito) and Empress Kojun (Nagako), was born on 23 December 1933 at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. Originally titled Tsugo-no-miya (Prince Tsugo) he entered the boy's elementary department of the Gakushuin in April 1940, advancing in the following years to the secondary and senior courses of the same school. In late 1944, both he and his younger brother, Prince Yoshi (now titled Prince Hitachi) were evacuated to Nikko, to escape the American bombing of Tokyo. Between 1947 and 1950, Mrs. Elizabeth Grey-Vining tutored Prince Tsugo, along with his brother, Prince Yoshi (now titled Prince Hitachi), and his sisters, Princesses Taka and Suga (now Mrs. Ikeda Takamsa and Mrs. Shimazu Hisanaga), in English. Prince Tsugo was formally invested as crown prince and received the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum on 10 November 1951. On 2 June 1953, he represented Japan at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. During the same visit, King Haakon VII of Norway invested the Crown Prince with the Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav. Crown Prince Akihito entered the Department of Politics and Economics at Gakushuin University in April 1952, but left the university in April 1954 before graduating. He later attended the university as an auditor for a further two years. The Crown Prince served as honorary president or patron of the Third Asian Games (1958), the International Sports Games for the Disabled (1964), the Eleventh Pacific Science Conference (1966), the Universiades in Tokyo (1967) and in Kobe (1985), the Japan World Exposition in Osaka (1970), The International Skill Contest for the Disabled (1981), and the Second International Conference on Indo-Pacific Fishes (1986). For his research on the taxonomy of the gobiid fish, he became a member of the Linnean Society of London in 1980; he became an honorary member of this society in 1986. As crown prince, the present emperor acted in matters of state on behalf of Emperor Showa, in accordance with the 1947 Constitution, during his visits abroad and from the time the emperor became seriously ill in September 1987. On the death of Emperor Showa, 7 January 1989, he ascended the throne. The government named new era Heisei, which means the "achievement of peace." The Enthronement Ceremony (Sokui Rei Seiden no Gi) took place in Tokyo on 12 November 1990. The Emperor, an expert on the taxonomy of gobiid fishes, has published at least twenty-six papers on the subject in the journal of the Ichthyological Society of Japan. The Emperor is also a research associate of the Australian Museum and since 1992 an honorary member of the Zoological Society of London. As Crown Prince and Crown Princess, Their Imperial Majesties made official visits to Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Denmark, Ethiopia, Finland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Jordan, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Singapore, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Tanzania, Thailand, the United Kingdom, the United States, the former Yugoslavia, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo), and Zambia. As Emperor and Empress, Their Imperial Majesties have paid state visits to Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand (1991), the Peoples' Republic of China (1992), Belgium, Germany and Italy (1992), the Holy See and the European Union (1993), the United States and Brazil (1994), the United Kingdom and Denmark (1998). During his 1998 state visit to the United Kingdom, HM Queen Elizabeth II invested the Emperor with the Most Noble Order of the Garter.

 

Her Imperial Majesty MICHIKO, Empress of Japan, (Michiko Kogo), Order of the Precious Crown, Order of the Sacred Treasure, is the eldest daughter of the late Mr. Shoda Hidesburo (1904-1999), former president and honorary chairman of Nisshin Flour Milling Co., Ltd., and his wife, the former Soejima Fumiko (1910-1988). The Shoda family is prominent in both industrial and academic circles. Miss Shoda Michiko was born in Tokyo on 20 October 1934. She received her primary education at Futaba Elementary School, but was obliged to leave school due to the American bombing of Tokyo. She returned to the school following the war and later attended Seishin (Sacred Heart) High School. She entered the Department of Literature of the Sacred Heart Women's University in April 1953.  Miss Shoda, the class valedictorian, received her degree in 1957. She met the then-Crown Prince at a tennis court in Karuizawa in the summer of 1957, after graduating the university. As Miss Shoda Michiko, she was engaged to the Crown Prince in 1958. She became crown princess on the day of her wedding, 10 April 1959, thus becoming the first commoner to marry into the Imperial Family. The Crown Prince and Crown Princess broke with centuries of Imperial Court tradition by raising their children, instead of entrusting their care to chamberlains. She became empress upon the death of Emperor Shôwa on 7 January 1989. The Empress has authored or co-authored several collections of waka (traditional Japanese poems), as well as two children's books. In January 1989, the Empress succeeded her mother-in-law, the Empress Kojun, as the honorary president of the Japan Red Cross.

 

The Emperor and Empress have issue:

 

  1. The Crown Prince (Hiro no miya Naruhito Shinnô), see below
  2. Prince Akishino (Akishino no miya Fumihito Shinnô), see below
  3. Princess Nori (Nori no miya Sayako Naishinnô), see below

 

 

 

The Crown Prince and Princess of Japan

 

His Imperial Highness The Crown Prince (Naruhito) of Japan (Naruhito Kotashi), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the elder son of the Emperor and heir apparent, was born on 23 February 1960 at the Aoyama Detached Palace complex (site of the crown prince's palace or Togo-gohso) in Tokyo. Originally titled Prince Hiro (Hiro-no-miya Naruhito Shinno), he attended the elementary and secondary departments of the Gakushuin. The prince graduated from the Department of History in the Faculty of Letters of Gakushuin University in March 1982. He went on to take the first part of the doctoral course in history in at Gakushuin University's Graduate School of Humanities, specializing in the medieval history of Japan. In July 1983 he went to Great Britain, where he entered the Graduate School of Oxford University the following October, studying commodity transport on the River Thames in the latter half of the eighteenth century at Merton College. The prince is an honorary fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. Prince Hiro became heir apparent to the throne upon the demise of Emperor Shôwa on 7 January 1989. He received his formal investiture as crown prince on 23 February 1990 at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo. The Crown Prince married Miss Owada Masako on 9 June 1993. Her Imperial Highness the Crown Princess (Masako), Order of the Sacred Treasure, was born in Tokyo on 9 December 1963, the daughter of Ambassador Owada Hishashi and Owada Yomiko. Owada Hishashi is a career diplomat. Ambassador Owada served as administrative vice-minister of foreign affairs, counselor in the Japanese embassy in Moscow, and later as Japan's permanent representative to the United Nations. Owada Masako spent her childhood in New York City and Moscow, where her father held diplomatic posts. The future Crown Princess attended Harvard University, where she concentrated in economics and graduated magna cum laude in June 1990. She later did post graduate work at Balliol College, Oxford University and worked as diplomat in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Crown Princess Masako is fluent in English, French and German. She became an honorary fellow of Balliol College, Oxford in July 1995. The Crown Prince and Crown Princess have issue:

    1. Princess Toshi (Toshi no miya Aiko Naishinnô), born at Tokyo 1 December 2001
    2.  

      Prince Akishino

       

      His Imperial Highness Prince Akishino (Akishino no miya Fumihito Shinnô), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of Chrysanthemum, the second son of the Emperor and the Empress, was born on 30 November 1965 at the Aoyama Detached Palace in Tokyo. Prince Akishino, whose personal name is Fumihito, is currently second in line to the throne.  His childhood title was Prince Aya (Aya no miya). He attended the elementary and secondary departments of the Gakushuin. In April 1984, he entered the Law Department of Gakushuin University, where he studied law and biology. After graduating from the university, he studied the taxonomy of fish at St. John College, University of Oxford in Great Britain (October 1988-June 1990). In 1986, His Imperial Highness became president of the Yamashina Institute of Ornithology and president of the Japan Committee of the World Wide Fund for Nature. The prince received a Ph.D. in ornithology from the Graduate University for Advanced Studies in October 1996. On 29 June 1990, the prince married Kawashima Kiko. Upon his marriage, he received the title Prince Akishino (Akishino no miya) and authorization from the Imperial Household Economy Council to form a new branch of the Imperial Family. Her Imperial Highness Princess Akishino, Order of the Sacred Treasure, was born in Shizouka on 11 September 1966. She is the only daughter of Kawashima Tatsuhiko, professor of economics at Gakushuin University, and his wife, Kazuko. The Princess holds a masters degree in psychology at Gakushuin University. In September 1995, Princess Akishino succeeded the late Princess Chichibu as honorary president of the Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association. Prince and Princess Akishino have issue:

       

        1. Princess Mako (Akishino no miya Mako Naishinnô), born at Tokyo October 23, 1991 
        2. Princess Kako (Akishino no miya Kako Naishinnô), born at Tokyo Dec. 29, 1994 

      Princess Nori

      Her Imperial Highness Princess Nori (Nori no miya Sayako Naishinnô) was born on 18 April 1969 at the Aoyama Detached Palace in Tokyo. She is the third child and only daughter of the current Emperor and Empress. On 27 April 1969, Emperor Shôwa named her Sayako and granted her the title Princess Nori (Nori no miya). Princess Nori completed her primary and secondary education at the Gakushuin. She graduated from the Department of Japanese Literature in the Faculty of Letters at Gakushuin University in March 1992. The princess is a part-time researcher at the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology in Chiba Prefecture [founded by the late Dr. (Marquis until 1947) Yamashina Yoshimaro, a younger son of Prince Yamashina Kikumaro (1873-1908)]. In addition to her academic interests, the princess is interested in traditional Japanese dance (and has performed several times at the National Theater) and activities related to the training and use of guide dogs for the visually impaired. Since her father's ascension to the throne, she has accompanied the Emperor and Empress on state visits to Thailand and Indonesia. In August 1990, Prince Nori traveled to California to represent the Imperial Household at the fiftieth annual Nisei Week Japanese Festival at the invitation of then-Governor Pete Wilson. She has made official visits to France, Germany, Bulgaria, and several other countries. The princess lives with her parents at the Imperial Palace and continues to carry out public engagements. Princess Nori, who celebrated her thirty-first birthday in April 2000, remains unmarried. Under the current Imperial Household Law, the princess would lose her title, government stipend, and official status as a member of the imperial family, if she marries.

      Prince Hitachi

      His Imperial Highness Prince Hitachi (Hitachi no miya Masahito Shinnô), Grand Cordon of Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, Order of the Rising Sun, was born on 28 November 1935 at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. The second son of the late Emperor Shôwa and Empress Kojun and the younger brother of the current Emperor, Prince Hitachi is currently third in line to the throne (following the Crown Prince and Prince Akishino). Originally titled Prince Yoshi (Yoshi-no-miya), he received his primary education at the then-boys department of the Gakushuin. In late 1944, the Imperial Household Ministry evacuated Prince Yoshi and Prince Tsugo (later Crown Prince Akihito) to Nikko, to escape the American bombing of Tokyo. From 1947 to 1950, Mrs. Elizabeth Gray Vining tutored both princes and their sisters, then-Princesses Taka, Yori and Suga, in English. The Prince received his secondary education from the Gakushuin. He completed his undergraduate degree in chemistry from the Faculty of Science at Gakushuin University in May 1960. He completed his graduate education at the Tokyo University, specializing in the study of tumors. The Prince has conducted tumor research under the cancer institute of the Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research. Prince Hitachi is honorary president of the Japan Arts Association. In September 1997, he received an honorary doctorate from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. On 30 September 1964, the prince married Tsugaru Hanako, the fourth daughter of former Count Tsugaru Yosh*taka. The following day Emperor Shôwa granted him the title Prince Hitachi (Hitachi no miya); the Imperial Household Council having previously given the prince authorization to set up a new branch of the imperial family. Her Imperial Highness Princess Hitachi, Order of the Precious Crown, was born on 19 July 1940 in Tokyo. She is a graduate of the English literature course at Gakushuin University. The princess is the patron of several cultural and charitable organizations. Prince and Princess Hitachi have no children.

       

      Prince Mikasa

      His Imperial Highness Prince Mikasa (Mikasa no miya Takahito Shinno), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, Order of the Rising Sun, was born on 2 December 1915 at the Imperial Palace, the youngest son of the late Emperor Taisho (Yoshihito) and the Empress Teimei (Sadako). Prince Mikasa, whose given name is Takahito, is the surviving brother of the late Emperor Shôwa and surviving paternal uncle of the Emperor. He is fourth in line to the throne. Originally titled Sumi-no-miya (Prince Sumi), he attended the elementary and secondary departments of the Peers' School. He entered the Military Academy in 1932 and upon graduation, in June 1936, joined the Fifteenth Cavalry Regiment. Upon reaching majority in December 1935, Emperor Shôwa authorized him to form his own princely house, Mikasa-no-miya. On 23 October 1941, he married Takagi Yoriko, the second daughter of Viscount Takagi Masanari, one-time minister of the Imperial Household. Prince Mikasa graduated from the Military Staff College in December 1941 and held staff positions with the Chinese Expeditionary Forces, the Imperial General Headquarters and the Air Services, rising to the rank of major. After the war, he enrolled in the Literature Faculty of Tokyo University and pursued advanced studies in archeology, Middle Eastern studies, and Semitic languages. Since 1954, he has directed the Japanese Society for Middle East Studies. He is honorary president of the Japan Society of Orientology. The Prince has held visiting and guest faculty appointments in Middle Eastern studies and archeology at various universities in Japan and abroad, including: Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, Tokyo Christian Women's University, the University of London, the University of Hokkaido and the University of Shizouka. He has done research at the London University School of Oriental and African Studies. The prince holds honorary degrees from Colombo University, Lancaster University, Ankara University, Sofia University, and Canakkale University. Prince Mikasa has attended numerous international conferences, and has traveled widely. He has visited approximately 30 countries, including Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the Netherlands, Australia, Iran, and Turkey. Prince Mikasa is honorary president of the Japan-Netherlands Society, honorary chairman of the Publishers' Association for Cultural Exchange, honorary chairman of the Society for Middle Eastern Studies in Japan, president of the Center for Middle Eastern Culture [chukinto bunka senta], and honorary president of the Japan Society of Leisure and Recreation Studies. He is the author is several books on archeology and the Middle East including Ancient Oriental History and I, The Light of Ancient Culture, and History Begins Here. In 1994, a newspaper revealed that during the Pacific War, Prince Mikasa had written a stinging indictment of the conduct of the Imperial Army in China.  The prince had witnessed Japanese atrocities against Chinese civilians and The Army General Staff suppressed the document, but one copy survived and surfaced in 1994. Her Imperial Highness Princess Mikasa, Order of the Precious Crown, was born on 4 June 1923 in Tokyo. The future princess received her primary and secondary education at the Gakushuin. Princess Mikasa is a member of the Imperial Household Council and the patron of several cultural and charitable organizations. Prince and Princess Mikasa have five children.

       

        1. Princess Yasuko (Mikasa no miya Yasuko Naishinnô), born 26 April 1944; lost rank and title upon marriage; m. 16 Dec. 1966 Mr. Konoe Tadateru, a grandson of former Prime Minister Prince Konoe Fumimaro (1891-1945) [peer]; now vice president of the Japanese Red Cross Society, and has issue (see Genealogy of the Imperial Dynasty Part II).
        2. Prince Mikasa Tomohito (Mikasa no miya Tomohito Shinnô), see below
        3. Prince Katsura (Katsura no miya Yoshihito Shinnô), see below. 
        4. Prince Takamado (Takamado no miya Norihito Shinnô), see below
        5. Princess Masako (Mikasa no miya Masako Naishinnô), b. at Tokyo 23 October 1951; lost rank and title upon marriage; m. 14 October 1983 Mr. Sen Masayuki (b. 1956), son of Sen Sosh*tsu, head of the Urasen-ke tea ceremony school in Kyoto, and has issue (see Genealogy of the Imperial Dynasty Part II)

      Prince Mikasa Tomohito

      His Imperial Highness Prince Tomohito (Mikasa no miya Tomohito Shinnô), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the eldest son of Prince and Princess Mikasa (Takahito), was born in Tokyo on 5 January 1946. The prince is a first cousin of the Emperor, fifth in line to the throne and heir apparent to the house of Mikasa-no-miya. He received his primary and secondary education at Gakushuin. After graduating from Gakushuin University, he studied at Magdalen College, Oxford. The prince wrote a book of poetry about his time in Great Britain entitled, Tomohito's Lovely English Life. Prince Tomohito is the patron of the Annual Tokyo Motor Show and the honorary president of ten social welfare and youth organizations. The prince was honorary president of the National Recreation Association from 1991 until his resignation December 1997. On 7 November 1980, he married Miss Aso Nobuko. Her Imperial Highness Princess Tomohito, Order of the Precious Crown, the third daughter of the late Mr. Aso Takakichi and his wife, the late Yoshida Kazuko, was born in Tokyo on 9 April 1955. Princess Tomohito is a granddaughter of the late Yoshida Shigeru (1878-1967), former prime minister of Japan (1946-47, 1948-54). Her brother, Aso Tara, is a six-term Liberal Democratic member of House of Representatives and a former director-general of the Economic Planning Agency. The Princess's father also served as an LDP representative in the Diet. Prince and Princess Tomohito have issue:

       

          1. Princess Akiko (Mikasa no miya Akiko Nyoô), born at Tokyo 20 Dec. 1981. 
          2. Princess Yôko (Mikasa no miya Yuko Nyoô), born at Tokyo 25 October 1983. 

      Prince Katsura

      His Imperial Highness Prince Katsura (Katsura no miya Yoshihito Shinnô), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the second son of Prince and Princess Mikasa (Takahito), was born on 11 February 1948. He is a first cousin of the Emperor and currently sixth in line to the throne. The prince, whose personal name is Yoshihito, received his primary and secondary education from the Gakushuin. After graduating from Gakushuin University, he studied at the Australian National University from 1972 to 1975. On 11 February 1986, he received the title Prince Katsura (Katsura no miya) and the authorization for form his own branch of the imperial family. During the Edo period (1607-1867), the house of Katsura-no-miya was one of four princely families entitled to provide a successor to the throne, in default of a direct heir. The title faced extinction with the death of the tenth head (Emperor Ninko's infant son, Prince Misahito). Emperor Ninko's daughter, Princess Sumiko (1838-1881), became the eleventh head of the Katsura-no-miya house in her own right. Upon her death, the Katsura-no-miya title remained vacant until Emperor Shôwa bestowed it on his nephew in 1986. Prince Katsura has made official visits to Australia, New Zealand, and several other Pacific-rim countries. He is honorary president of the Agricultural Society of Japan, the Japan Forestry Association, the Japan-Australia Association, and the Japan-New Zealand Association. Prince Katsura is unmarried.

       

      Prince Takamado

      His Imperial Highness Prince Takamado (Takamado no miya Norihito Shinnô), Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the third son of Prince and Princess Mikasa, was born on 29 December 1950. The Prince, whose given name is Norihito, is a first cousin of the Emperor and currently seventh in line to the throne. Like his brothers, he received his primary and secondary education at the Gakushuin. He graduated from the Faculty of Law at Gakushuin University in March 1978. He studied at Queens University in Canada from 1978 to 1981. The Prince received the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum upon his coming of age on 29 December 1974. He received the title Takamado-no-miya (Prince Takamado) upon his marriage to Miss Tottori Hisako on 6 December 1984. Her Imperial Highness Princess Takamado, Order of the Precious Crown, the first daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tottori Shigejiro, was born in Tokyo on 10 July 1953. She received a degree in Chinese Studies, Archaeology and Anthropology from Girton College at the University of Cambridge in 1975. Prince and Princess Takamado are patrons of the Asiatic Society of Japan. The Prince is honorary president of the Japan-Canada Association and works as an administrator (unpaid) at the Japan Foundation. He is also the honorary patron of the Japan Football (Soccer) Association. Prince and Princess Takamado have issue:

       

          1. Princess Tsuguko (Takamado no miya Tsuguko Nyoô), born at Tokyo 6 March 1986. 
          2. Princess Noriko (Takamado no miya Noriko Nyoô), born at Tokyo 21 July 1988. 
          3. Princess Ayako (Takamado no miya Ayako Nyoô), born at Tokyo 15 September 1990. 

      Princess Takamatsu

      Her Imperial Highness Princess Takamatsu (Takamatsu no miya Kikuko Shinnô-hi), Order of the Precious Crown, Order of the Sacred Treasure is the widow of Prince Takamatsu (Nobuhito), the third son of the late Emperor Taishô and a younger brother of the late Emperor Shôwa. The Princess is one of two living paternal aunts of the present Emperor. The former Tokugawa Kikuko was born in Tokyo on 26 Dec. 1911, the eldest daughter of Prince Tokugawa Yoshihisa [peer] (b. at Shizuoka 2 Sept. 1884; d. at Tokyo 22 Jan. 1922), and his consort, Princess Miyeko (b. at Tokyo 14 Feb. 1891 and d. at Tokyo 25 Apr 1933). Her paternal grandfather was Prince Tokugawa Yoshinobu [peer], the fourteenth and last Tokugawa shogun. Her maternal grandfather was Prince Arisugawa Takahito (b. at Kyoto 11 Feb. 1862 and d. at Maiko, near Kobe 5 July 1913), the tenth and last head of the Arisugawa no miya house, one of the four imperial branch families of the Edo period (1603-1867). Lady Kikuko received her primary and secondary education in the then-girls department of the Gakushuin. She married Prince Takamatsu (b. at the Aoyama Palace, Tokyo 3 Jan. 1905; d. at Tokyo 3 Feb. 1987) at the Imperial Palace on 4 February 1930. Shortly after their wedding, Prince and Princess Takamatsu embarked on an official goodwill tour of Great Britain, France, Portugal, Spain, Italy and Turkey. After the Second World War, the Prince and Princess served as patrons for a number of charitable and international friendship organizations including the Japan-Denmark Society, the Japan-France Society, and the Tofu Society for the Welfare of Leprosy Patients. Following Prince Takamatsu's death, the Princess became the patron of the Princess Takamatsu Cancer Research Foundation. In 1991, Princess Takamatsu and a chamberlain discovered twenty-nine volumes of diaries kept by the late Prince Takamatsu between 1934 and 1947. She agreed to publish the diaries in the magazine Chou Koron. In December 1998, Princess Takamatsu published an anthology of 25 autobiographical essays entitled, Stories about Chrysanthemums and Hollyhocks. [The chrysanthemum is the crest of the Imperial family and the hollyhock is the crest of the Tokugawa family.]  In September 1999, Princess Takamatsu underwent surgery at St. Luke's International Hospital to alleviate a duodenal ulcer and a fractured left femur. She left the hospital on 27 January 2000 and continues to reside at the Takanawa Palace in Tokyo's Minato Ward.

       

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