- Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu
Infobox Military Person
name= HIH Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu
lived=16 October 1875 -16 August 1946
placeofbirth=Tokyo ,Japan
placeofdeath=Tokyo ,Japan
caption= Fleet Admiral Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu
nickname=
allegiance=Empire of Japan
branch=navy|Empire of Japan
serviceyears=1895 -1946
rank=Fleet Admiral
commands="Takachiho", "Asahi", "Ibuki"
Chief of theImperial Japanese Navy General Staff
unit=
battles=Russo-Japanese War Battle of the Yellow Sea Battle of Tsushima World War I World War II
awards=
family=
laterwork=Supreme War Councilnihongo|
Fleet Admiral Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu|伏見宮博恭王| Fushimi-no-miya Hiroyasu ō |extra=16 October 1875 -16 August 1946 was a scion of the Japanese imperial family and was a career naval officer who served as chief of staff of theImperial Japanese Navy from 1932 to 1941.Early life
Prince Hiroyasu was born in
Tokyo as Prince Narukata, the eldest son ofPrince Fushimi Sadanaru (1858 - 1922) and Princess Arisugawa Toshiko (1858 - 1930), the daughter ofPrince Arisugawa Taruhito . The twenty-second head of theFushimi-no-miya , one of the four "shinnoke " cadet branches of the imperial family entitled to succeed to the throne in default of a direct heir, Prince Fushimi a second cousin to both Emperor Shōwa (Hirohito) andEmpress Kōjun , and nephew ofPrince Kan'in Kotohito He succeeded to title Kwacho-no-miya in
23 April 1883 , upon which he changed his name from "Narukata" to "Hiroyasu," but returned to the house of Fushimi-no-miya on16 January 1904 .Marriage & family
On
9 January 1896 , Prince Hiroyasu married Tokugawa Tsuneko (1882-1939), the ninth daughter of PrinceTokugawa Yoshinobu , Japan's last "Shogun", with whom he had six children:
# HIHPrince Fushimi Hiroyoshi (8 December 1897 –19 October 1938 )
# HIH Princess Fushimi Yasuko (b.14 November 1898 )
# HIH Prince Fushimi Hirotada (26 January 1902 –19 July 1924 )
# Marquis Kwacho Hironobu (b.1905)
# HIH Princess Fushimi Tomoko (18 May 1907 –30 June 1947 )
# HIH Princess Fushimi Atsuko (b.18 May 1907 )
# Count Fushimi Hirohide (1912 –26 August 1943 )Military career
Prince Hiroyasu dropped out of the
Imperial Japanese Naval Academy , moved toGermany in 1889, and graduated from the Naval Academy of theKaiserliche Marine in 1895. He spoke fluent German. Prince Fushimi served as alieutenant commander in theRusso-Japanese War (1904-05). He sustained wounds aboard thebattleship "Mikasa" in theBattle of the Yellow Sea (August 1904). He later served asexecutive officer on the cruiser "Niitaka", battleship "Okinoshima", and cruisers "Naniwa" and "Nisshin". [Nishida, Imperial Japanese Navy]He studied in
Great Britain from 1909-1910 and upon his return to Japan commanded thecruiser "Takachiho" (1910), and later the "Asahi" and thebattlecruiser "Ibuki". He rose tovice admiral on1 December 1916 and fulladmiral on1 December 1922 . He was a member of the Supreme War Council from 1920 onward. He was a strong supporter of theFleet Faction within the Navy, pushing for cancellation of theWashington Naval Agreement and the building of a more powerful navy.Prince Hiroyasu succeeded his father as the twenty-third head of the house of Fushimi in 1923. Admiral Prince Fushimi became the chief of the
Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff on2 February 1932 , replacing AdmiralAbo Kiyokazu , and held the post to9 April 1941 .Prince Fushimi received the largely honorary rank of fleet admiral on
27 May 1932 .While he was Chief of Staff of the Imperial Japanese Navy, the
Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service used strategic bombing against Chinese cities includingShanghai and Chongqing. The bombing ofNanjing andGuangzhou , which began on 22 and23 September 1937 , resulted in widespread international condemnation of Japan and a resolution against Japan by the Far Eastern Advisory Committee of theLeague of Nations .As Chief of Staff, he supported the "southward advance" into northern
French Indochina and theDutch East Indies , but expressed reservations about theTripartite Pact during the19 September 1940 Imperial Conference.He remained a member of the Supreme War Council throughout the
Pacific War , but officially retired from the active list in 1945.After the war, Prince Fushimi was the honorary president of the Imperial Life Boat Association, the Japan Seamen's Relief Association, the Cancer Research Society, the Naval Club, the Japan-German Society, and the Scientific and Chemical Research Institute.
Prince Fushimi died in Tokyo shortly after the end of World War II on
16 August 1946 . Like all members of the imperial family, he was exonerated from criminal prosecutions before theTokyo tribunal byDouglas MacArthur .Gallery
References
Books
*cite book
last = Bix
first = Herbert B
year = 2001
title = Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan
publisher = Harper Perennial
location =
id = ISBN 0-06-093130-2
*cite book
last = Frank
first = Richard B.
year = 2001
title = Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire
publisher = Penguin (Non-Classics)
location =
id = ISBN 0-14-100146-1
*cite book
last = Spector
first = Ronald
year = 1985
title = Eagle Against the Sun: The American War With Japan
publisher = Vintage
location =
id = ISBN 0-394-74101-3External links
*cite web
last = Nishida
first = Hiroshi
url = http://homepage2.nifty.com/nishidah/e/px00.htm#p003
title = Materials of IJN: Fushimi Hiroyasu
work = Imperial Japanese Navy
accessdate = 2007-08-23
accessyear =Notes
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