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Empress Go-sakuramachi Of Japan




Go-Sakuramachi is currently the last woman ever to reign as Empress Regnant of Japan. However, this will change if a bill (announced in January 2006) rescinds the Meiji-era restriction against female successors, thus going to allow the sole child, Princess Aiko , of Crown Prince Naruhito to ascend the throne, is passed by the Japanese diet. (See Japanese Imperial Succession Controversy ).


GENEALOGY

She was the second daughter of Emperor Sakuramachi . Her older sister died young, and her younger brother was Emperor Momozono .


LIFE

In 1762, she acceded to the throne by a special decree of Emperor Momozono, whose son Prince Hidehito (later Emperor Go-Momozono ) was only 5 years old.

By her enthronement, she became the first reigning empress in her own right in 119 years, since Empress Meishō .

In the ninth year of her reign, 1770 , she abdicated in favor of Emperor Go-Momozono. However, that reign did not last long, ending in 1779 when Go-Momozono died without leaving a son. When her nephew was dying, the then-retired ( Daijo Tenno ) Go-Sakuramachi consulted with the senior courtiers and imperial guards, planning to accept Prince Fushimi-no-miya as an adopted son, but they eventually decided on Prince Morohito (師仁), sixth son of Prince Kan'in-no-miya Sukehito (閑院宮典仁), who was supported by the emperor's chief advisor ( Kampaku ). Prince Morohito, hastily adopted by Go-Momozono at deathbed, became Emperor Kōkaku .

After the throne had switched to that branch of the imperial line, Go-Sakuramachi, in her role as Retired Emperor , came to be referred to as the Guardian of the Young Lord (Emperor Kōkaku). In this role, in 1789, during a scandal involving an honorary title, she admonished the Emperor.

She died in 1813, at the age of 73. She left behind a book called ''Kinchū-nenjū no koto'' (禁中年中の事, roughly "Matters of Years in the Imperial Court"), consisting of poems, imperial letters, imperial chronicles, and so forth, excelling in literary merit.


ERAS OF HER REIGN