Tokugawa Masako
Tokugawa Masako | |
---|---|
Empress consort of Japan | |
Tenure | 1624–1629 |
Born | November 23, 1607 |
Died | August 2, 1678 | (aged 70)
Spouse | |
Issue |
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House | Tokugawa Clan (by birth) Imperial House of Japan (by marriage) |
Father | Tokugawa Hidetada |
Mother | Oeyo |
Tokugawa Masako (徳川 和子, November 23, 1607 – August 2, 1678), also known as Kazu-ko,[1] was the Empress consort of Japan as wife of Emperor Go-Mizunoo. She was a prominent and influential figure the Imperial-shogunate ties and relations, because of her collaboration with her parents Oeyo and Tokugawa Hidetada, the second shōgun of the Edo period.
History
- 1620 (Genna 6): Masako entered the palace as a consort of the Emperor Go-Mizunoo. Although there was already a concubine for Go-Mizunoo, the marriage to Masako was celebrated with great pomp.[2]
- 1624: Masako is granted the title of chūgū (中宮), indicating she was a second legitimate wife and therefore an established Empress Consort. She is the first consort to hold this title since the reign of Emperor Go-Hanazono.[3]
- 1629: When the Emperor Go-Mizunoo abdicated in 1629, Masako took the title and name of Tōfuku mon-in (東福門院).[4]
Masako's daughter, Imperial Princess Onna-Ichi-no-miya Okiko, succeeded her father. She ascended the Chrysanthemum Throne as Empress Meishō.[4] Meishō would be succeeded by two of her half-brothers, who would later become known as Emperor Go-Kōmyō and Emperor Go-Sai. Both had been brought up by Masako as if they were her own sons.[5]
Masako had two younger daughters were Princess Teruko (1625-1651) who married Konoe Hisatsugu, and Princess Akiko (1629-1675), also known as the Third Princess.
Achievements
She used her wealth to bring together Edo and Kyoto and also to help maintain the high standards of the court. She also used it to restore significant buildings that had been damaged in the previous years of warring. Many of these restorations were originally credited to her brother Iemitsu, or her husband, but have recently been properly credited to her. Another important way she used her money is as a representation of the Tokugawa clan. When Masako and Lady Kasuga broke a taboo by visiting the imperial court as a commoner, Emperor Go-Mizunoo abdicated, embarrassed, and Meisho became empress. The shōgun, Tokugawa Iemitsu, was now the uncle of the sitting monarch.
Family
- Father: Tokugawa Hidetada (1581-1632)
- Mother: Oeyo (1573-1626)
- Husband: Emperor Go-Mizunoo (1596-1680)
- Children:
- Princess Okiko (女一宮興子内親王, Onna-ichi-no-miya Okiko Naishinnō, 9 January 1624 – 4 December 1696), became Empress Meishō
- Princess Onna-ni (女二宮, Onna-ni-no-miya, 14 October 1625 – 2 July 1651) married Konoe Hisatsugu
- Prince Sukehito (高仁親王, Sukehito Shinnō, 31 December 1626 – 11 July 1628)
- Prince Waka (若宮, Waka-no-miya, 1628)
- Princess Akiko (女三宮昭子内親王, Onna-San-no-miya Akiko Naishinnō, 13 October 1629 — 18 June 1675)
- Princess Yoshiko (女五宮賀子内親王, Onna-Go-no-Miya Yoshiko Naishinnō, 21 July 1632 – 2 August 1696) married Nijō Mitsuhira
- Princess Kiku (菊宮, Kiku-no-miya, 1633–1634)
- Adopted:
Interests
- Empress Masako was a patron of the arts. She collected antiques as well as contemporary art. She was also skilled at calligraphy and dabbled in poetry.
Notes
References
- Lillehoj, Elizabeth. "Tōfukumon'in: Empress, Patron and Artist". Woman's Art Journal 17(1996):28–34.
- Ponsonby-Fane, Richard Arthur Brabazon. (1959). The Imperial House of Japan. Kyoto: Ponsonby Memorial Society. OCLC 194887
- Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Nihon Ōdai Ichiran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon. Paris: Royal Asiatic Society, Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. OCLC 5850691