Difference between revisions of "Shin-Kogimon-in"

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(Created page with "*''Born: 1624'' *''Died: 1677'' *''Other Names: Shin-Chûnagon, Sono Kuniko'' Shin-Kôgimon-in was the last favorite consort of Emperor Go-Mizunoo, and the mother...")
 
 
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It is said that she and her children, along with her son-in-law Konoe Motohiro, but with the exception of Emperor Reigen, formed a close-knit clique within the Imperial Court, constantly paying one another visits and engaging in social and cultural activities together.
 
It is said that she and her children, along with her son-in-law Konoe Motohiro, but with the exception of Emperor Reigen, formed a close-knit clique within the Imperial Court, constantly paying one another visits and engaging in social and cultural activities together.
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She was posthumously elevated to ''jugô'', a rank just below that of Empress.<ref>Segawa Seigle, 12.</ref>
  
 
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Latest revision as of 20:13, 12 November 2014

  • Born: 1624
  • Died: 1677
  • Other Names: Shin-Chûnagon, Sono Kuniko

Shin-Kôgimon-in was the last favorite consort of Emperor Go-Mizunoo, and the mother of two Imperial princesses and four Imperial princes, one of whom went on to take the throne as Emperor Reigen (r. 1663-1687).

Her children included four sons, Gyôjo (1640-1695, abbot at Myôhô-in), Shinkei (1649-1707, abbot at Ichijô-in), Sonshô (1651-1694, abbot at Shôren-in), and Emperor Reigen (1654-1732), and two daughters, Shinanomiya Tsuneko (1642-1702), who went on to marry Konoe Motohiro, and Eikyô (1657-1686), who became abbess at Daishô-ji.

It is said that she and her children, along with her son-in-law Konoe Motohiro, but with the exception of Emperor Reigen, formed a close-knit clique within the Imperial Court, constantly paying one another visits and engaging in social and cultural activities together.

She was posthumously elevated to jugô, a rank just below that of Empress.[1]

References

  • Cecilia Segawa Seigle, "Shinanomiya Tsuneko: Portrait of a Court Lady," in Anne Walthall (ed.), The Human Tradition in Modern Japan, Scholarly Resources, Inc. (2002), 4-5.
  1. Segawa Seigle, 12.