Takako Shimazu Explained

Takako Shimazu
Birth Name:Takako, Princess Suga
(Japanese: 清宮貴子内親王)
Birth Date:2 March 1939
Birth Place:Tokyo Imperial Palace,
Tokyo City, Empire of Japan
Children:Yoshihisa Shimazu
Relatives:Imperial House of Japan
Father:Emperor Shōwa
Mother:Princess Nagako Kuni

, born, is a former member of the Imperial House of Japan. She is the fifth and youngest daughter of Emperor Shōwa and Empress Kōjun, the youngest sister of the Emperor Emeritus of Japan, Akihito, and the paternal aunt of the current Emperor of Japan, Naruhito. She married Hisanaga Shimazu on 3 March 1960. As a result, she gave up her imperial title and left the Japanese Imperial Family, as required by law.

Biography

Princess Takako was born at the Tokyo Imperial Palace. Her childhood appellation was .

As with her elder sisters, she was not raised by her biological parents, but by a succession of court ladies at a separate palace built for her and her sisters in the Marunouchi district of Tokyo.[1] She graduated from the Gakushuin Peers School, and was also tutored along with her siblings in the English language by an American tutor, Elizabeth Grey Vining during the Allied occupation of Japan following World War II. Princess Takako graduated from Gakushuin University Women's College with a degree in English literature in March 1957.

On 10 March 1960, Princess Takako wed Hisanaga Shimazu (born 29 March 1934, Tokyo), the son of the late Count Hisanori Shimazu and (at the time) an analyst at the Japan Export-Import Bank (JEXIM). They married in a Tokyo restaurant in a ceremony attended by her parents and brother, Hirohito, Empress Nagako, and Akihito.[2] The couple were introduced by common acquaintances at the Gakushuin. They shared a common interest in the music of Perez Prado.

Upon her marriage, the Princess relinquished her membership in the Imperial Family and adopted her husband's surname, in accordance with the 1947 Imperial Household Law. Described by Western media sources at the time as a "commoner bank clerk," the groom was actually a grandson of the last daimyō of Satsuma Domain, Shimazu Tadayoshi, and thus a maternal first cousin to Empress Kōjun, making the bride and groom first cousins once removed.[3] Takako and her husband had one son, Yoshihisa Shimazu, who was born on 5 April 1962.

In 1963, three years after her marriage, she narrowly escaped from an attempted kidnapping. Due to extensive media coverage, the location of the couple's home was common knowledge, as was her $500,000 marriage dowry (in Japan, the bride is given a sum of money for her marriage). A member of the criminal group tipped off the police before the kidnapping could occur.

Hisanaga Shimazu pursued a thirty-year career with JEXIM, including postings to Washington, D.C. in the United States and Sydney, Australia accompanied by his wife. He became a member of the Board of Directors of the Sony Corporation upon his retirement from the bank in 1987, served as executive director of the Sony Foundation for Science Education from 1994 to 2001, and is currently research director of the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology.

The former Princess has made numerous appearances on Japanese television as a commentator on world events, and is also on the Board of Directors of the Prince Hotels chain.

Honours

See also: List of honours of the Japanese imperial family by country.

National honours

References

. Herbert P. Bix . 2001 . Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan . Harper Perennial . 0-06-093130-2. Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan .

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bix . Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan . 270–271.
  2. March 21, 1960 . Milestones . . LXXV . 12.
  3. Web site: 島津氏(佐土原家) (Shimazu genealogy). Reichsarchiv. 3 September 2017. ja.