Prince Kaya Tsunenori

Prince Kaya Tsunenori

Infobox Military Person
name=Prince Kaya Tsunenori
lived= 23 July 1900 - 2 January 1978
placeofbirth=Tokyo, Japan
placeofdeath=Tokyo, Japan


caption= Prince Kaya Tsunenori
nickname=
allegiance=Empire of Japan
branch=
serviceyears=1920-1945
rank=General
commands=
unit=
battles= World War II
awards=
family=
laterwork=

nihongo|Prince Kaya Tsunenori|賀陽宮恒憲王|Kaya no miya Tsunenori ō (23 July 1900 - 2 January 1978), was the second head of the Kaya-no-miya collateral branch of the Japanese imperial family. He was first cousin to Empress Kojun (Nagako), the wife of Emperor Shōwa (Hirohito).

Early life

Prince Kaya Tsunenori was born in Tokyo, the first son of Prince Kaya Kuninori and his wife, the former Daigo Yoshiko. He received his primary and secondary education at the boys' department of the Gakushuin Peers’ School. On 8 December 1909, he became the second head of the Kaya-no-miya house upon his father's death.

Marriage and family

On 3 May 1921, Prince Kaya married Kujō Toshiko (16 May 1903 - 23 March 1993), the third daughter of Prince Kujō Michiazane, head of one of the Five regent houses of the Fujiwara clan. His wife also a niece of Empress Teimei, the consort of the Emperor Taishō. The couple had eight children:

# Prince Kaya Kuninaga (21 April 1922 - 19 April 1986)
# Prince Kaya Kuniaki (b.1922)
# Princess Kaya Michiko (b. 29 July 1923)
# Prince Kaya Harunori (b. 3 July 1926)
# Prince Kaya Akinori (b. 17 August 1929)
# Prince Kaya Fuminori (b. 12 July 1931)
# Prince Kaya Munenori (b. 24 November 1935)
# Prince Kaya Takenori (b.1942)

Military career

Like the other imperial princes of his generation, Prince Kaya was a career military officer. In 1920, after serving a term in the House of Peers, he graduated from the 32nd class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy and received a commission as a lieutenant (2nd class) in the cavalry. In August 1925, he became commander of the Tenth Cavalry Regiment (at the rank of captain) and graduated from the 38th class of Army Staff College. The following year, he rose to the rank of major in the cavalry, and was appointed an instructor at the Army Staff College the following year. He joined the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff in 1933 and was promoted to colonel two years later.

Prince and Princess Kaya undertook a seven-month world tour in 1934, visiting the United States, Great Britain, France, and Germany. The tour received extensive press coverage at the time.

After his return to Japan, he replaced his uncle, Prince Asaka (Yasuhiko), as the emperor's personal envoy to Nanking, the occupied capital of Nationalist China, following the Nanjing Massacre in January 1938. He was promoted to brigadier general in 1940 and lieutenant general in 1943 in command of the IJA 43th Division. Prince Kaya became commander of the Third Imperial Guard Division in 1944 and briefly served as president of the Army Staff College during the closing stages of World War II.

Commoner life

After 14 October 1947, Prince Kaya Tsunenori and his family were divested of their imperial status and become commoners due to the American occupation authorities' reform of the Japanese imperial household. Barred from holding public office because of his military career, the former prince received a lump payment from the reconstituted Imperial Household Council in order to "maintain his dignity." The former prince later served on the boards of directors of the Taishō Life Insurance Company and Nissan Life Insurance Company. He served as the honorary president of the International Martial Arts Federation from its founding in 1953 until 1957.

The former prince died of a heart ailment on 2 January 1978 at his home in Chiba.

The former Kaya-no-miya palace is now the site of the Chidori-ga-fuchi war memorial in downtown Tokyo.

Gallery

ources

# Foreign Affairs Association of Japan, "The Japan Year Book, 1939-40" (Tokyo: Kenkyusha Press, 1939).
# Foreign Affairs Association of Japan, "The Japan Year Book, 1945" (Tokyo: Kenkyusha Press, 1946).
# "Royal Japanese Greeted Here; Spend Afternoon Seeing Sights; Prince and Princess Kaya Saluted in Harbor and Received by Notables," "New York Times", 15 August 1934, p. 19.
# "Britain And Japan: Prince Kaya's Visit," "The Times", 3 May 1934, p. 16.
# "Japan Biographical Encyclopedia and Who's Who". Tokyo, Rengo-Press: 1965.
# "Obituary 1--No Title," "New York Times", 4 January 1978, p. D19.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Prince Kaya — The Japanese imperial title of Prince Kaya (jp: Kaya no miya ) was given by the emperor to his male relatives.*Prince Kaya (Kuninori)*Prince Kaya (Tsunenori)The last carrier of this title was Prince Kaya Kuninori s son, Prince Kaya Tsunenori… …   Wikipedia

  • 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 the Meiji period. Early lifeThe prince was born in Kyoto, as the second of the nine sons of Prince Kuni …   Wikipedia

  • Ōke — For the Ottoman unit of weight, see Oka (measure). The ōke (王家, literally Princely Houses?), were branches of the Japanese Imperial Family created from branches of the Fushimi no miya house. All but one of the ōke were formed by the descendants… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Japanese government and military commanders of World War II — In the administration of Japan dominated by the Imperial Way Faction movement during World War II, the civil central government of Japan was under the management of some military men, and of some civilians:Central governmentupreme head of… …   Wikipedia

  • List of World War II topics (P) — # P 15 Termit # P 59 Airacomet # P 61 Black Widow # P 80 Shooting Star # P 4 class torpedo boat # P. G. Wodehouse # P. O. Box 1142 # P. Y. Saeki # P107 # Paavo Berg # Paavo Nurmi # Paavo Yrjölä # Pablo de Escandón y Barrón # Pacific Fighters #… …   Wikipedia

  • Cour impériale du Japon — Maison impériale du Japon Japon Cet article fait partie de la série sur la politique du Japon, sous série sur la politique. Constitution du Japon …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Maison impériale du Japon — Japon Cet article fait partie de la série sur la politique du Japon, sous série sur la politique …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”