Hisako, Princess Takamado Explained

Hisako
Princess Takamado
Royal House:Imperial House of Japan
Father:Shigejiro Tottori
Mother:Fumiko Tomoda
Birth Date:10 July 1953
Birth Place:Shirokane, Minato, Tokyo, Japan

(born ; 10 July 1953), is a member of the Japanese Imperial Family as the widow of Norihito, Prince Takamado.

Background and education

Hisako was born on 10 July 1953 in Shirokane, Minato, Tokyo. She is the eldest daughter of Japanese industrialist Shigejiro Tottori. Her mother, Fumiko Tottori (née Tomoda), died on 18 July 2023 at the age of 96.[1] Hisako accompanied her father to England, where he was transferred for work, and while still a child became fluent in the English language. She subsequently graduated from Girton College, Cambridge in 1975 with undergraduate degrees in anthropology and archaeology. On her return to Japan, she obtained a position working for a translation company, but soon returned to England to learn about legal terminology used in statutes. She returned to Japan again in 1982. After her return, she was hired to assist Prince Mikasa as an interpreter and assistant at the 31st International Asian-North African Cultural Symposium. Princess Takamado received a PhD in arts from the Osaka University of Arts in February 2012.

Marriage and family

On 23 April 1984, she attended a reception hosted by the Embassy of Canada in Tokyo, where she first met Prince Norihito of Mikasa, grandson of Emperor Taishō. He proposed on 20 May and the Imperial Household Council announced the engagement on 1 August 1984. The formal engagement ceremony made on 17 September 1984, and the wedding held on 6 December 1984. They have three daughters:

Public life and activities

Prince and Princess Takamado were the most widely traveled couple in the Japanese Imperial Family, visiting 35 countries together in 15 years to represent Japan on various functions. The Prince's last visits included Egypt and Morocco in May 2000, Hawaii in July 2001 (to promote the Japanese tea ceremony), and to South Korea from May to June 2002. The latter was in order to attend the Opening Ceremony of the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea-Japan. The goodwill visit by the Prince and Princess to Korea was the first Japanese imperial visit since World War II, and was an important step in the promotion of friendly bilateral relations between Japan and South Korea.[4] While in South Korea, the couple toured the country extensively, met with President Kim Dae-jung and ordinary South Koreans, and he visited the facilities for the physically disabled in South Korea that the Princess Masako Nashimoto had sponsored.[5]

Prince Takamado died of ventricular fibrillation while playing squash with the Canadian ambassador, Robert G. Wright, at the Canadian Embassy, leaving a widow and three young daughters on 21 November 2002 at the age of 47. Since the Prince's death, Princess Takamado has been extremely active in a very large number of charitable organizations involving sports, cultural exchange and the environment, taking on all of the posts formerly held by her late husband, as well as numerous new posts. Since November 2002, the princess has served as the Honorary President of the Prince Takamado Trophy, All Japan-Middle School English Oratorical Contest.[6]

In June 2003, she visited Dublin, Republic of Ireland for the 2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games. In June 2004, she made an official visit to Canada, traveling extensively across the nation as part of the 75th Anniversary of the formal diplomatic relations between Canada and Japan. During this visit, she received two honorary doctorates in Law, one from the University of Alberta and the other from the University of Prince Edward Island.[7]

In March 2004, the Princess was elected to succeed Queen Noor of Jordan as honorary president of BirdLife International.[8] In November 2004, she visited Bangkok, Thailand, to attend the 3rd IUCN World Conference as honorary president of BirdLife International. She visited Montevideo, Uruguay in 2008, and Buenos Aires, Argentina for the Birdlife World Conservation Conference. During this visit, she attended special high goal polo exhibition played by the Novillo Astrada brothers in her honor at the La Aguada Polo Club.

In June 2005, she visited Germany to attend the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup, attending matches between Germany against Argentina, and Japan against Brazil. Afterwards, she visited Jordan to attend the royal wedding of Princess Badiya bint El Hassan. In November of the same year, returned to England for the Global Council Meeting of BirdLife International. In January 2006, she returned to Canada to attend the opening of the "Prince Takamado Gallery of Japan" at the Royal Ontario Museum. She also returned to Germany later that year in order to attend the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

In June 2013, she visited Sweden to attend the Wedding of Princess Madeleine and Christopher O'Neill. In July 2017, she visited Dublin, Republic of Ireland to celebrate the 60th anniversary of modern Ireland–Japan relations. In August 2019, she visited Edmonton, Canada to celebrate the 90th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Japan and Canada.[9] In November 2022, she visited Qatar to watch 2022 FIFA World Cup.

In May–June 2023, she visited Jordan with her eldest daughter, Princess Tsuguko to attend the Wedding of Hussein, Crown Prince of Jordan, and Rajwa Al Saif.[10] [11]

Health

In March 2020, Princess Takamado underwent surgery for acute appendicitis at the University of Tokyo Hospital.[12] On 17 March, she was discharged after checking and verifying that the operation had gone well.[13]

In November 2022, it was announced that Princess Takamado had tested positive for COVID-19 and would be convalescing at her residence. Her symptoms included fever and sore throat.[14] [15] [16]

Bibliography

The Princess is the author of two children's books published in English; Katie and the Dream-Eater (OUP, 1996) and Lulie the Iceberg (OUP, 1998).

Titles and styles

Since her marriage, Hisako is styled as Her Imperial Highness The Princess Takamado.[7]

Honours

See also: List of honours of the Japanese Imperial Family by country.

National honours

Foreign honours

Honorary degrees

Honorary positions

Issue

NameBirthMarriageIssue
DateSpouse
8 March 1986
Noriko Senge
(Princess Noriko of Takamado)
22 July 1988 5 October 2014Kunimaro Senge
Ayako Moriya
(Princess Ayako of Takamado)
15 September 1990 28 October 2018 Kei Moriyathree sons

References

  1. https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/society/obituaries/20230719-123875/ Obituary
  2. Web site: Princess Noriko marries son of Izumo Taisha priest, relinquishes royal status. 5 October 2014 . 5 October 2014.
  3. Web site: Japan's Princess Ayako surrenders her royal status as she marries for love. CNN. Helen. Regan. Yoko. Wakatsuki. 29 October 2018. 30 October 2018.
  4. Web site: Japanese royals make symbolic trip to Seoul. BBC News. 30 May 2002. 12 February 2023.
  5. [Yomiuri Shimbun]
  6. http://www.jnsafund.org/en/origin/root.html Jnsafund
  7. Web site: Her Imperial Highness Princess Takamado and her family. The Imperial Household Agency. 12 February 2023.
  8. Web site: Princess Takamado becomes BirdLife's Honorary President. BirdLife International. 13 March 2004. 12 February 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20040404181659/http://www.birdlife.net/news/news/2004/03/princess_takamado.html. 4 April 2004.
  9. Web site: Her Imperial Highness Princess Takamado Visit to Edmonton : Consulate-General of Japan in Calgary. www.calgary.ca.emb-japan.go.jp. 2019-09-28.
  10. Web site: Japan Princesses Hisako, Tsuguko to Attend Royal Wedding in Jordan. 9 May 2023. 9 May 2023. Nippon.com. 2 June 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230602194133/https://www.nippon.com/en/news/yjj2023050900233/japan-princesses-hisako-tsuguko-to-attend-royal-wedding-in-jordan.html. dead.
  11. Web site: Japan's Princess Hisako and Princess Tsuguko Attend the Jordanian Royal Wedding. 1 June 2023. 2 June 2023. Town & Country.
  12. Web site: 高円宮妃久子さま、急性虫垂炎で手術へ 東大病院に入院. 5 March 2020. 5 March 2020. Asahi.com. ja.
  13. Web site: 虫垂炎で手術の久子さま、ご退院. 17 March 2020. 17 March 2020. The Sankei News. ja.
  14. Web site: Princess Hisako becomes fifth member of imperial family to contract COVID-19. 16 November 2022. 16 November 2022. The Japan Times.
  15. Web site: Princess Hisako tests positive for novel coronavirus. 18 November 2022. 18 November 2022. The Japan News.
  16. Web site: Princess Hisako becomes 5th COVID-19 case for Japan imperial family. 16 November 2022. 16 November 2022. Kyodo News.
  17. https://imperialfamilyjapan.wordpress.com/2015/08/05/florence-nightingale-medal-2/ Hisako wearing Red Cross Medals
  18. https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2008/11/10/pdfs/A44705-44705.pdf Boletín Oficial del Estado
  19. Web site: Ikebana International . 2009-01-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160711005242/http://www.ikebanahq.org/ . 2016-07-11 . dead .
  20. http://www.ikebanahq.org/profile.html Ikebana International
  21. http://www.ikyf.org/about_ikyf.html Ikyf
  22. https://www.jva.or.jp/topics/20230401-1/ JVA
  23. Web site: Honorary Vice-Presidents. Japan Red Cross Society. 12 February 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20130727203307/http://www.jrc.or.jp/english/about/glance.html. 27 July 2013.

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