- Prince Kaya Kuninori
(
1 September 1867 -8 December 1909 ) was a member of the Japanese imperial family and the founder of one of the nine "oke " (or princely houses) in theMeiji period .Early life
The prince was born in
Kyoto , as the second of the nine sons ofPrince Kuni Asahiko (1824 – 1891) at the time of the Meiji Restoration. His father, a scion of the collateral imperial line ofFushimi-no-miya , was a laicizedBuddhist priest who became a close advisor to theEmperor Kōmei and Emperor Meiji, His mother was the court-lady Izumitei Shizue.Originally titled Iwa-no-miya, he was called Iwaomaro-ō from
15 March 1874 . He changed his personal name to Kuninori on21 July 1886 . Unlike his younger half-brothers,Prince Nashimoto Morimasa ,Prince Higashikuni Naruhiko , andPrince Asaka , Prince Kuninori did not pursue a military career. He was excluded from succeeding to the house ofKuni-no-miya on the grounds of ill health on7 March 1887 .A new princely family
Emperor Meiji granted Prince Kuninori the title Kaya-no-miya ("ad personam") and the rank of "shinnō"; on
17 December 1892 . Later, on4 May 1900 , the emperor authorized him to form a new collateral branch of the imperial family.Prince Kaya Kuninori succeeded his father as supreme priest "(saishu)" of the
Grand Shrine of Ise and served in that post until his death.Marriage & family
On
26 November 1892 , the Prince Kaya Kuninori married Daigo Yoshiko(7 December 1865 -21 November 1941 ), the daughter ofMarquis Daigo Tadayori, the lastkuge of that line of court nobles. Prince and Princess Kaya had four children:# HIH Princess Kaya Yukiko (b.
23 Nov 1895 )
# HIHPrince Kaya Tsunenori (7 January 1900 -3 January 1978 ), married Kujō Toshiko (16 May 1903 -23 March 1995 ), fifth daughter of Prince Kujō Michiazane and niece ofEmpress Teimei , the consort ofEmperor Taishō .
# HIH Princess Sakiko (30 March 1903 -1 September 1923 ), married her second cousinPrince Yamashina Takehiko ; no issue. She was residing with her husband at their home in Kamakura,Kanagawa prefecture at the time of theGreat Kanto Earthquake . The building collapsed, killing the princess and her unborn child.
# HIH Princess Satoko (b.29 June 1904 )Gallery
References
* Fujitani,T. "Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan". University of California Press; Reprint edition (1998). ISBN 0-520-21371-8
*Lebra, Sugiyama Takie. "Above the Clouds: Status Culture of the Modern Japanese Nobility." University of California Press (1995). ISBN 0-520-07602-8
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.