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Takatsukasa Fusako : ウィキペディア英語版
Takatsukasa Fusako
, also known as , was an empress consort of Japan. She was the consort of Emperor Reigen. Her father was Takatsukasa Norihira, who had the post of ''sadaijin'' and the . Her half-siblings by other mothers included the ''kampaku'' Takatsukasa Fusasuke, the ''sadaijin'' Kujō Kaneharu, and Takatsukasa Nobuko, the wife of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi. Another theory holds that Fusako was actually Norihira's younger sister, whom he adopted as his daughter.
On December 1, 1670, Fusako entered the court of Emperor Reigen, one year her junior, as a court lady. On June 23, 1673, the palace went up in flames, and the estate of ''udaijin'' Konoe Motohiro was used as a temporary palace. This was not a new occurrence: in 1661, during the reign of the previous emperor Emperor Go-Sai, another conflagration had led to the use of Motohiro's estate. On October 3, 1673, Fusako gave birth to her daughter . In light of the great fire in Kyoto that had destroyed the palace, the era name was changed to Enpō. But on January 10, 1676, immediately after a new palace had been completed, the temporary one at Motohiro's estate caught flame in turn. Fusako and the emperor found refuge at the home of before entering the new palace two days later.
On January 1, 1683, Fusako was proclaimed , and on December 3 she was invested as ''chūgū''. She thereby became the emperor's legitimate wife—during the entire Edo period, this only happened four times. Reigen abdicated the throne on May 2, 1687, in favor of Crown Prince Asahito, who then became Emperor Higashiyama. Accompanying this, Fusako was bestowed the Buddhist name Shinjōsaimon-in. In early 1695, the shogunate presented her with 1,000 ''koku'' of land.
Takatsukasa Fusako died on May 19, 1712. Her grave is located at Tsuki no wa no misasagi in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto.
==Notes==
All Western dates calculated using Tsuchihashi's database via the (Nengocalc ) tool.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Takatsukasa Fusako」の詳細全文を読む



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