- Prince Nashimoto Moriosa
"' (
16 December 1819 -2 December 1885 ), was the founder of a collateral line of the Japanese imperial family.Prince Moriosa was born in
Kyoto , the 10th son ofPrince Fushimi Sadayoshi (1775-1841), the eighteenth head of theFushimi-no-miya , the oldest of the four branches of the imperial dynasty allowed to provide a successor to theChrysanthemum throne should the main imperial house fail to produce an heir. He was adopted byEmperor Kōkaku , but later became aBuddhist priest at the Emman-in Temple. He was named Kajii-no-miya and rose to become head of theTendai sect.After the
Meiji Restoration , in 1868,Emperor Meiji recalled him (along with all other Imperial princes in Buddhist temples) to secular status, and he resumed the name Moriosa-ō. In 1870, Emperor Meiji granted him the title Nashimoto-no-miya and permission to form a new princely house.Prince Nashimoto was childless. He adopted
Prince Yamashina Kikumaro , the eldest son ofPrince Yamashina Akira , as his heir. Prince Nashimoto Moriosa died on2 December 1885 but Prince Kikumaro remained in the Yamashina-no-miya family, and the Nashimoto-no-miya title passed to Prince Morimasa, the fourth son ofPrince Kuni Asahiko instead.References and further reading
# Keene, Donald. "Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852-1912" (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002) ISBN 0-231-12340-X
# Lebra, Takie Sugiyama. "Above the Clouds: Status Culture of the Modern Japanese Nobility" (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993) ISBN 0-520-07702-8
# Papinot Edmond. "Historical and geographical dictionary of Japan" (New York: F. Ungar Pub. Co., 1948)
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