Imperial House of Japan Tree

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The Imperial House of Japan (??, k?shitsu), also referred to as the Imperial Family, and the Yamato Dynasty, comprises those members of the extended family of the reigning Emperor of Japan who undertake official and public duties. Under the present Constitution of Japan, the Emperor is "the symbol of the State and of the unity of the people". Other members of the imperial family perform ceremonial and social duties, but have no role in the affairs of government. The duties as an Emperor are passed down the line to their children and so on.

The Japanese monarchy is the oldest continuous hereditary monarchy in the world. The imperial house recognizes 125 monarchs beginning with the legendary Emperor Jimmu (traditionally dated to 11 February 660 BCE) and continuing up to the current emperor, Akihito; see its family tree.

Historical evidence for the first 29 emperors is marginal by modern standards, but there is firm evidence for the hereditary line since Emperor Kinmei ascended the throne 1500 years ago.


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List of current members

Article 5 of the Imperial Household Law (????, K?shitsu Tenpan) defines the imperial family (??) as the Empress (??, k?g?); the Grand empress dowager (????, tai-k?taig?); the Empress dowager (???, k?taig?); the Emperor's legitimate sons and legitimate grandsons in the legitimate male-line (??, shinn?), and their consorts (???, shinn?hi); the Emperor's unmarried legitimate daughters and unmarried legitimate granddaughters in the legitimate male-line (???, naishinn?); the Emperor's other legitimate male descendants in the third and later generations in the legitimate male-line (?, ?) and their consorts (??, ?hi); and the Emperor's other unmarried legitimate female descendants in the third and later generations in the legitimate male-line (??, jo?). In English, shinn? and ? are both translated as "prince" as well as shinn?hi, naishinn?, ?hi and jo? as "princess".

After the removal of 11 collateral branches from the Imperial House in October 1947, the official membership of the imperial family has effectively been limited to the male line descendants of the Emperor Taish?, excluding females who married outside the imperial family and their descendants.

There are currently 19 members of the Imperial Family:

  • The Emperor was born at Tokyo Imperial Palace on 23 December 1933, the elder son and fifth child of the Emperor Sh?wa and Empress K?jun. He was married on 10 April 1959 to Michiko Sh?da. Emperor Akihito succeeded his father as emperor on 7 January 1989.
  • The Empress, formerly Michiko Sh?da, was born in Tokyo on 20 October 1934, the eldest daughter of Hidesaburo Sh?da, president and honorary chairman of Nisshin Flour Milling Inc..
    • The Crown Prince, the eldest son of the Emperor and the Empress, was born in the Hospital of the Imperial Household in Tokyo on 23 February 1960. He became heir apparent upon his father's accession to the throne. Crown Prince Naruhito was married on 9 June 1993 to Masako Owada.
    • The Crown Princess was born on 9 December 1963, the daughter of Hisashi Owada, a former vice minister of foreign affairs and former permanent representative of Japan to the United Nations. The Crown Prince and Crown Princess have one daughter:
      • The Princess Toshi (born 1 December 2001)
    • The Prince Akishino, the Emperor's second son, and second on the succession line, was born on 30 November 1965. His childhood title was Prince Aya. He received the title Prince Akishino and permission to start a new branch of the imperial family upon his marriage to Kiko Kawashima on 29 June 1990.
    • The Princess Akishino was born on 11 September 1966, the daughter of Tatsuhiko Kawashima, professor of economics at Gakushuin University. Prince and Princess Akishino have two daughters and a son:
      • Princess Mako of Akishino (born 23 October 1991)
      • Princess Kako of Akishino (born 29 December 1994)
      • Prince Hisahito of Akishino (born 6 September 2006)
  • The Prince Hitachi was born on 28 November 1935, the second son and sixth child of the Emperor Sh?wa and Empress Kojun. His childhood title was Prince Yoshi. He received the title Prince Hitachi and permission to set up a new branch of the imperial family on 1 October 1964, the day after his wedding.
  • The Princess Hitachi was born on 19 July 1940, the daughter of former Count Yoshitaka Tsugaru. Prince and Princess Hitachi have no children.

The Princess Mikasa is the widow of the Prince Mikasa (2 December 1915 - 27 October 2016), the fourth son of Emperor Taish? and Empress Teimei and an uncle of Emperor Akihito. The Princess was born on 4 June 1923, the second daughter of Viscount Masanori Takagi. Princess Mikasa has two daughters and three sons with the late Prince Mikasa.

  • Princess Tomohito of Mikasa is the widow of Prince Tomohito of Mikasa (5 January 1946 - 6 June 2012), the eldest son of the Prince and Princess Mikasa and a first cousin of Emperor Akihito. The Princess was born on 9 April 1955, the daughter of Takakichi As?, chairman of As? Cement Co., and his wife, Kazuko, a daughter of former Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida. She has two daughters with the late Prince Tomohito of Mikasa:
    • Princess Akiko of Mikasa (born 20 December 1981)
    • Princess Y?ko of Mikasa (born 25 October 1983)
  • The Princess Takamado is the widow of the Prince Takamado (29 December 1954 - 21 November 2002), the third son of the Prince and Princess Mikasa and a first cousin of Emperor Akihito. The Princess was born 10 July 1953, the eldest daughter of Shigejiro Tottori. She married the prince on 6 December 1984. Originally known as Prince Norihito of Mikasa, he received the title Prince Takamado and permission to start a new branch of the imperial family on 1 December 1984. Princess Takamado has three daughters, two of whom remain members of the Imperial family:
    • Princess Tsuguko of Takamado (born 6 March 1986)
    • Princess Ayako of Takamado (born 15 September 1990)

Family tree

The following family tree shows the lineage of the contemporary members of the Imperial family (living members in bold). Princesses who left the imperial family upon their marriage are indicated in italics:



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Living former members

Under the terms of the 1947 Imperial Household Law, naishinn? (imperial princesses) and Jo? (princesses) lose their titles and membership in the imperial family upon marriage, unless they marry the Emperor or another member of the imperial family. Four of the five daughters of Emperor Sh?wa, the two daughters of Prince Mikasa, the only daughter of the Emperor Akihito and most recently, the second daughter of Prince Takamado, left the imperial family upon marriage, joining the husband's family and thus taking the surname of the husband. The eldest daughter of Emperor Sh?wa married the eldest son of Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni in 1943. The Higashikuni family lost its imperial status along with the other collateral branches of the imperial family in October 1947. The living former imperial princesses are:

  • Atsuko Ikeda (born 7 March 1931), fourth daughter and fourth child of Emperor Sh?wa and surviving elder sister of Emperor Akihito.
  • Takako Shimazu (born 2 March 1939), fifth daughter and youngest child of Emperor Sh?wa and younger sister of Emperor Akihito.
  • Yasuko Konoe (born 26 April 1944), eldest daughter and eldest child of Prince and Princess Mikasa.
  • Masako Sen (born 23 October 1951), second daughter and fourth child of Prince and Princess Mikasa.
  • Sayako Kuroda (born 18 April 1969), third child and only daughter of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko.
  • Noriko Senge (born 22 July 1988), second daughter of Prince and Princess Takamado.

In addition to these former princesses, there are also several people of Imperial descent in eight of the eleven cadet branches of the dynasty (Asaka, Fushimi, Higashifushimi, Higashikuni, Kan'in, Kaya, Kitashirakawa, Kuni, Nashimoto, Takeda, and Yamashina) that left the imperial family in October 1947. The Nashimoto collateral branch became extinct in the male line in 1951, followed by the Yamashina and Kan'in branches in 1987 and 1988. The Emperor Sh?wa's eldest daughter, Shigeko Higashikuni, and his third daughter, Kazuko Takatsukasa, died in 1961 and 1989, respectively.


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Succession

Historically, the succession to the Chrysanthemum Throne has generally passed in male line of the imperial lineage. The imperial clan previously included specially designated collateral lines or shinn?ke (princely houses), too. The surviving shinn?ke and several other branches of the extended imperial clan (the ?ke) were reduced to commoner status in 1947.

Before the Meiji Restoration, Japan had eight female tenn? or reigning empresses, all of them daughters of male line of the imperial clan. None ascended purely as a wife or as a widow of an emperor. None of these empresses married or gave birth after ascending the throne.

Article 2 of the Constitution of Japan provides that "the Imperial Throne shall be dynastic and succeeded to in accordance with the Imperial Household Law passed by the Diet." The Imperial Household Law of 1947 enacted by the 92nd and last session of the Imperial Diet, retained the exclusion on female dynasts found in the 1889 law. The government of Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida hastily cobbled together the legislation to bring the Imperial House in compliance with the American-written Constitution of Japan that went into effect in May 1947. In an effort to control the size of the imperial family, the law stipulates that only legitimate male descendants in the male line can be dynasts; that naishinn? (imperial princesses) and jo? (princesses) lose their status as imperial family-members if they marry outside the imperial family; that shinn? (imperial princes), other than the crown prince, ? (princes), unmarried imperial princes and princesses, and the widows of imperial princes and princesses may, upon their own request or in the event of special circumstances, renounce their membership in the imperial family with approval of the Imperial House Council; and that the Emperor and other members of the imperial family may not adopt children.

Before September 2006, there was a potential succession crisis since no male child had been born into the imperial family since Prince Akishino in 1965. Following the birth of Princess Toshi, there was some public debate about amending the Imperial House Law to allow female descendants of an emperor and their descendants to succeed to the throne. In January 2005, Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro appointed a special panel of judges, university professors, and civil servants to study changes to the Imperial House Law and to make recommendations to the government. On October 25, 2005, the commission recommended amending the law to allow females in the male line of imperial descent to succeed to the throne. Since the birth of a son to another of Akihito's children the issue has been left in abeyance by both the public and successive governments.


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History of titles

? (?) is a title (literally "king", commonly translated "prince") given to male members of the Japanese Imperial Family who do not have the higher title of shinn? (??; literally "close-relative king", commonly translated "prince" or "imperial prince"). The female equivalent is jo?/nyo? (??; literally "female king" or "queen", commonly translated "princess") who do not have the higher title of naishinn? (???; literally "inner close-relative king", commonly translated "princess" or "imperial princess"). ? can also be translated as "king" when it refers to a monarch of a kingdom. The origin of this double meaning is a copying of the Chinese pattern where a "king" is a title for noble persons under the emperor: imperial family members, high-ranking feudal lords, and foreign monarchs (excluding some strong monarchs equivalent to Chinese emperor). Unlike in China, however, ? was only used for imperial family members and foreign monarchs (except the former Korean emperor and his successors).

Historically, any male member of the Imperial Family was titled ? or by default, with shinn? being special titles granted by the Emperor. After the Meiji Restoration, the difference between ? and shinn? was altered. Under the new rule, a shinn? or naishinn? was a legitimate male-line Imperial Family member descended from an Emperor down to the great-great-grandchild. The term "legitimate Imperial Family" excludes the descendants of anyone who renounced their membership in the Imperial Family, or were expelled from the Imperial Family. Shinn? also included the heads of any of the shinn?-ke (???: shinn? family). A provision of law which never had an opportunity to be applied also stipulated that if the head of a shinn?ke succeeded to the Chrysanthemum Throne, then his brothers would acquire the title of shinn?, as well as their descendants (down to the great-grandchildren). The Emperor could also specially grant the title of shinn? to any ?.

In 1947, the law was changed so that shinn? and naishinn? only extended to the legitimate male-line grandchildren of an Emperor. The Imperial Family was also drastically pruned, disestablishing the ?-ke and the shinn?-ke. The consort of an ? or shinn? has the suffix -hi (?; female consort) to ? or shinn?, that is, ?hi (??) or shinn?hi (???).

In 2017, a one-off law permitting the Emperor to abdicate was passed by the Diet effective April 30, 2019. Once the process is complete, he will have the revived title of "J?k?."


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Source of the article : Wikipedia



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