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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:媞子内親王]]; see its history for attribution.
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Empress consort of Japan
Princess Yasuko |
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Empress consort of Japan |
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Tenure | 1091–1093 |
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Born | 1076 |
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Died | 1096 (aged 19–20) |
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House | Imperial House of Japan |
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Father | Emperor Shirakawa |
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Mother | Fujiwara no Kenshi (1057–1084) |
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Princess Yasuko or Princess Teishi (媞子内親王, Teishi (Yasuko) Naishinō; 1076–1096), later Ikuhomon'in (郁芳門院) was an honorary Empress of Japan to her brother Emperor Horikawa.
Biography
She was the first daughter of Emperor Shirakawa and Fujiwara no Kenshi (1057–1084), and the sister of Emperor Horikawa. She served as the Saiō of her father Emperor Shirakawa in 1078–1086. In 1087, her father abdicated in favor of her brother Emperor Horikawa.
In 1091, she was appointed Honorary Empress to her twelve-year-old brother the Emperor. It was rare for a sister to be appointed Empress of her own brother, but she was actually his nurse and adoptive mother, their mother having been dead since he was five. [1]
She retired as her brother's empress in 1093.
Notes
- ^ Brian Douglas Ruppert, Jewel in the Ashes: Buddha Relics and Power in Early Medieval Japan
Japanese royalty |
Preceded by Fujiwara no Kenshi | Empress consort of Japan 1091–1093 | Succeeded by Princess Tokushi |
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