Everything about Emperor Of Japan totally explained
» This is about the democracy; for other uses, see Emperor of Japan (disambiguation).
The of
Japan is the country's
monarch. He is the head of the
Japanese Imperial Family. Under Japan's present constitution, the Emperor is the "symbol of the state and the unity of the people," and is a ceremonial figurehead in a
constitutional monarchy (see
Politics of Japan).
The current emperor is His Imperial Majesty the
Emperor Akihito, who has been on the
Chrysanthemum Throne since his father
Emperor Shōwa (Hirohito) died in 1989.
The role of the emperor of Japan has historically alternated between that of a supreme-rank
cleric with largely symbolic powers and that of an actual imperial ruler. An underlying
imperial cult (the idea of
Arahitogami) regards the emperor as being descended from gods. Until 1945, the Japanese monarchs had always been, officially, the Commander-in-Chief of the forces. However, contrary to Western
monarchs, the role had rarely been assumed on the field since the establishment of the first shogunate. Japanese emperors have nearly always been controlled by external political forces, to varying degrees.
Since the mid-nineteenth century, the Imperial Palace has been called "Kyūjō" (宮城), then
Kōkyo (皇居), and located on the former site of
Edo Castle in the heart of
Tokyo. Earlier emperors resided in
Kyoto for nearly eleven centuries.
Role
Unlike most constitutional monarchies, the Emperor is neither sovereign nor even the
nominal chief executive. Rather, the
Constitution of Japan explicitly vests executive power in the
Cabinet and the
Prime Minister. He has no reserve powers related to government. The few duties he performs are efficiently regulated by provisions that are not phrased in regally dignified language, albeit expressed in legally precise terms that can only be exercised by order and consent of the Cabinet and Diet. For example, while he formally appoints the Prime Minister to office, the Constitution requires him to appoint the candidate "designated by the
Diet" without being given the avenue to decline appointment. This is in marked contrast to his status under the
Meiji Constitution, which recognises the emperor as the fount of all sovereign power of the realm and that the exercise of which is limited only by the constitution.
History
Although the emperor has been a symbol of continuity with the past, the degree of power exercised by the emperor of Japan has varied considerably throughout Japanese history.
Origin
The earliest emperor recorded in
Kojiki and
Nihonshoki is
Emperor Jimmu.
The key to knowing the origin of the Japanese imperial line may lie within the ancient imperial tombs known as
kofun. However, since the
Meiji Period, the
Imperial Household Agency has refused to open the
kofun to the public or to archaeologists, citing their desire not to disturb the spirits of the past emperors as justification for their refusal. But in December 2006, the Imperial Household Agency reversed its position and decided to allow researchers to enter some of the
kofun with certain restrictions.
House of Fujiwara, etc.
There have been six non-imperial families who have controlled Japanese emperors: the
Soga (530s-645), the
Fujiwara (850s-1070), the
Taira (for a relatively short period), the
Minamoto (and Kamakura bakufu) (1192-1331), the
Ashikaga (1336-1565) and the
Tokugawa (1603-1867). However, every shogun from the Minamoto, Ashikaga and Tokugawa families had to be officially recognised by the emperors, who were still the source of sovereignty, although they couldn't exercise their powers independently from the Shogunate.
Disputes
The growth of the
samurai class from the 10th century gradually weakened the power of the imperial family over the nation, leading to a time of instability. Cloistered emperors have been known to come into conflict with the reigning emperor from time to time; a notable example is the
Hōgen Rebellion of 1156, in which former
Emperor Sutoku attempted to seize power from the then current
Emperor Go-Shirakawa, both of whom were supported by different clans of samurai. Other instances, such as
Emperor Go-Toba's 1221 rebellion against the
Kamakura shogunate and the 1336
Kemmu Restoration under
Emperor Go-Daigo, show the power struggle between the Imperial House and the military governments of Japan.
Territorial Matters
Up to recent centuries, Japan's territory didn't include several remote regions of its modern-day territory. The name Nippon came into use only many centuries after the start of the current imperial line. Centralized government really only began to appear shortly before and during the time of
Prince Shotoku. The emperor was more like a revered embodiment of divine harmony rather than the head of an actual governing administration. In Japan it has always been easy for ambitious lords to hold actual power, as such positions have not been inherently contradictory to the emperor's position. Parliamentary government today continues a similar coexistence with the emperor as have various shoguns, regents, warlords, guardians, etc.
Historically the titles of tennō in Japanese have never included territorial designations as is the case with many European monarchs. The position of emperor is a territory-independent phenomenon - the emperor is the emperor, even if he's followers only in one province (as was the case sometimes with the southern and northern courts).
Shoguns
From 1192 to 1867, sovereignty of the state was exercised by the
shoguns, or their
shikken regents (1203-1333), whose authority was conferred by Imperial warrant. When
Portuguese and
Spanish explorers first contacted Japan (see
Nanban period), they gave analogy to the relationship between emperor and shogun to that of the
Roman Catholic Pope (godly, but with little political power) and king or
Holy Roman emperor (earthly, but with a relatively large amount of political power) though this in itself can be considered inaccurate as, like the Emperor, Roman Catholic Popes have wielded varying degrees of power throughout their history.
For example, the regent
Toyotomi Hideyoshi was recorded by the missionaries as "emperor Taicosama" (from
Taiko and the honorific
sama).
Meiji restoration
The Meiji restoration was in fact a kind of revolution, with the domains of Satsuma and Chōshū uniting to topple the Tokugawa Shogunate. Emperor Meiji's father, Emperor Komei, had begun to assert himself politically after
Commodore Matthew Perry's ships visited Edo. By the early 1860s, the dynamic between the imperial court and the Shogunate had changed drastically. Ironically, Komei had asserted himself against the Shogunate because he and the other nobles were upset at the failure of the Shogunate to expel the
barbarian interlopers. Disaffected domains and ronin began to rally to the call of "sonno, joi," or "respect the emperor, expel the barbarians." Satsuma and Chōshū used this turmoil to move against their historic enemy, and won an important military victory outside of Kyoto against Tokugawa forces. In 1868 an imperial "restoration" was declared, and the Shogunate was stripped of its powers. The next several years would see significant unrest and turmoil, along with sporadic rebellion.
Addressing and naming
There are two Japanese words equivalent to the English word "emperor":
tennō (天皇, lit. "heaven ruler"), which is used exclusively to refer to an emperor of Japan, and
kōtei (皇帝, the title used by Chinese emperors), which is used primarily to describe non-Japanese emperors.
Sumeramikoto (lit. "heavenly ruler above the clouds") was also used in
Old Japanese. The term
tennō was used by the emperors up until the Middle Ages; then, following a period of disuse, it was used again from the 19th century. In
English, the term
mikado (御門 or 帝 or みかど), which literally refers to "the Gate" (for example the gate of the imperial place) was once used (cf.
The Mikado, a 19th century
operetta), but this term is now obsolete.
Traditionally, the Japanese considered it disrespectful to call a person of noble rank by his given name. This convention has largely died out along with the noble class itself, although it's still observed for the imperial family. Since Emperor Meiji, it has been customary to have one
era per emperor and to rename each emperor after his death using the name of the era over which he presided, plus the word
Tennō. Prior to
Emperor Meiji, the names of the
eras were changed more frequently, and the posthumous names of the emperors were chosen in a different manner.
Outside of Japan, beginning with
Hirohito (Emperor Shōwa), the emperors are often referred to by their given names, both whilst alive and posthumously. For example, the previous emperor is usually called
Hirohito in English, although he was never referred to as Hirohito in Japan and was renamed
Shōwa Tennō after his death, which is the only name that Japanese speakers currently use when referring to him.
The current emperor on the throne is typically referred to by the title
Tennō Heika (天皇陛下, lit. "His Majesty the Emperor") or
Kinjō Heika (今上陛下, lit. "his current majesty") when speaking Japanese. Other terms used to refer to the emperor in Japanese include
Heika and
Okami, but these are much less typical than
Tennō Heika or
Kinjō Heika in ordinary conversation. The current emperor will be renamed "Heisei Tennō" after his death and will then be referred to exclusively by that name in Japanese. Non-Japanese speakers typically refer to him now as Akihito, or Emperor Akihito, and will likely continue to do so after his death.
Origin of the title
The ruler of Japan was known as either 大和大王/大君 (Yamato-ōkimi, Grand King of
Yamato), 倭王/倭国王 (Wa-ō/Wakoku-ō, King of Wa, used externally), or 治天下大王 (ame-no-shita shiroshimesu ōkimi or sumera no mikoto, Grand King who rules all under heaven, used internally) in Japanese and Chinese sources prior to the 7th century. The oldest documented use of the word "tennō" is on a wooden slat, or
mokkan, that was unearthed in
Asuka-mura, Nara Prefecture in 1998 and dated back to the reign of
Emperor Temmu and
Empress Jitō.
Marriage traditions
Throughout history, contrary to any sort of
harem practice of not recognizing a chief wife and just keeping an assortment of female chattel, Japanese emperors and noblemen appointed the position of chief wife.
The Japanese imperial dynasty consistently practiced official
polygamy, a practice that only ended in the
Taisho period (1912-1926). Besides the empress, the emperor could take, and nearly always took, several secondary consorts ("
concubines") of various hierarchical degrees. Concubines were allowed also to other dynasts (shinno, o). After a decision decreed by
Emperor Ichijo, some emperors even had two empresses simultaneously (
kogo and
chugu are the two separate titles for that situation). With the help of all this polygamy, the imperial clan thus was capable of producing more offspring. (Sons by secondary consorts were usually recognized as imperial princes, too, and could be recognized as heir to the throne if the empress didn't give birth to an heir.)
Of the eight female tennō (reigning empress) of Japan, none married or gave birth after ascending the throne. Some of them, being widows, had produced children prior to their reigns.
In the succession, children of the empress were preferred over sons of secondary consorts. Thus it was significant which quarters had preferential opportunities in providing chief wives to imperial princes, for example supplying future empresses.
Apparently the oldest tradition of official marriages within the imperial dynasty were marriages between dynasty members, even half-siblings or uncle and niece. Such marriages were deemed to preserve better the imperial blood or were aimed at producing children symbolic of a reconciliation between two branches of the imperial dynasty. Daughters of others than imperials remained concubines, until
Emperor Shōmu--in what was specifically reported as the first elevation of its kind--elevated his
Fujiwara consort to chief wife.
Japanese monarchs have been, as much as others elsewhere, dependent on making alliances with powerful chiefs and other monarchs. Many such alliances were sealed by marriages. The specific feature in Japan has been the fact that these marriages have been soon incorporated as elements of tradition which controlled the marriages of later generations, though the original practical alliance had lost its real meaning. A repeated pattern has been an imperial son-in-law under the influence of his powerful non-imperial father-in-law.
Beginning from the 7th and 8th centuries, emperors primarily took women of the
Fujiwara clan as their highest wives - the most probable mothers of future monarchs. This was cloaked as a tradition of marriage between heirs of two
kamis,
Shinto gods: descendants of
Amaterasu with descendants of the family kami of the Fujiwara. (Originally, the Fujiwara were descended from relatively minor nobility, thus their kami is an unremarkable one in the Japanese myth world.) To produce imperial children, heirs of the nation, with two-side descent from the two kamis, was regarded as desirable - or at least it suited powerful Fujiwara lords, who thus received preference in the imperial marriage market. The reality behind such marriages was an alliance between an imperial prince and a Fujiwara lord, his father-in-law or grandfather, the latter with his resources supporting the prince to the throne and most often controlling the government. These arrangements created the tradition of regents (
Sessho and Kampaku), with these positions allowed to be held only by a Fujiwara
sekke lord.
Earlier, the emperors had married women from families of the government-holding
Soga lords, and women of the imperial clan itself, i.e various-degree cousins and often even their own sisters (half-sisters). Several imperials of the 5th and 6th centuries were children of a couple of half-siblings. These marriages often were alliance or succession devices: the Soga lord ensured the domination of a prince, to be put as puppet to the throne; or a prince ensured the combination of two imperial descents, to strengthen his own and his children's claim to the throne. Marriages were also a means to seal a reconciliation between two imperial branches.
After a couple of centuries, emperors could no longer take anyone from outside such families as primary wife, no matter what the expediency of such a marriage and power or wealth brought by such might have been. Only very rarely was a prince without a mother of descent from such families allowed to ascend the throne. The earlier necessity and expediency had mutated into a strict tradition that didn't allow for current expediency or necessity, but only dictated that daughters of a restricted circle of families were eligible brides, because they'd produced eligible brides for centuries. Tradition had become more forceful than law.
Fujiwara women were often Empresses, and concubines came from less exalted noble families. In the last thousand years, sons of an imperial male and a Fujiwara woman have been preferred in the succession.
The five Fujiwara families, Ichijo, Kujo, Nijo, Konoe and Takatsukasa, were the primary source of imperial brides from the 8th century to the 19th century, even more often than daughters of the imperial clan itself. Fujiwara daughters were thus the usual empresses and mothers of emperors.
The acceptable source of imperial wives, brides for the emperor and crown prince, were even legislated into the
Meiji-era imperial house laws (1889), which stipulated that daughters of Sekke (the five main branches of the higher Fujiwara) and daughters of the imperial clan itself were primarily acceptable brides.
Since that law was repealed in the aftermath of
World War II, the present Emperor Akihito became the first crown prince for over a thousand years to have an empress outside the previously eligible circle.
Succession
The Japanese imperial dynasty bases its position in the expression that it has reigned "since
time immemorial". It is true that its origins are buried under mists of time: there are no records to show an existence of any early emperor who is known to have not been a descendant of other, yet earlier emperors. An early ancestor of the dynasty,
Emperor Keitai (flourished in the early 500's CE) however is suspected to have been an
homme nouveau, though the sources state that he was a male-line descendant of
Emperor Ōjin. According to records, the family he started on the throne, however descends also from at least one, probably of several, imperial princesses of the immediate dynasty of his predecessors. The tradition built by those legends has chosen to recognize just the putative male ancestry as valid for legitimizing his succession, not giving any weight to ties through the said princesses.
Millennia ago, the Japanese imperial family developed its own peculiar system of hereditary succession. It has been non-primogenitural, more or less agnatic, based mostly on rotation. Today, Japan uses strict
agnatic primogeniture - in other words, pure
Salic law. It was adopted from
Prussia, by which Japan was greatly influenced in the 1870s.
Strict agnatic primogeniture is, however, directly contradictory to several old Japanese traditions of imperial succession.
The controlling principles and their interaction were apparently very complex and sophisticated, leading to even idiosyncratic outcomes. Some chief principles apparent in the succession have been:
- Women were allowed to succeed (but there existed no known children of theirs whose father didn't also happen to be an agnate of the imperial house, thus there's neither a precedent that a child of an imperial woman with a non-imperial man were allowed to inherit, nor a precedent forbidding it of children of empresses). However, female accession was clearly much rarer than male.
- Adoption was possible and a much used way to increase the number of succession-entitled heirs (however, the adopted child had to be a child of another member agnate of the imperial house).
- Abdication was used very often, and in fact occurred more often than death on the throne. In those days, the emperor's chief task was priestly (or godly), containing so many repetitive rituals that it was deemed that after a service of around ten years, the incumbent deserved pampered retirement as an honored former emperor.
- Primogeniture wasn't used - rather, in the early days, the imperial house practised something resembling a system of rotation. Very often a brother (or sister) followed the elder sibling even in the case of the predecessor leaving children. The "turn" of the next generation came more often after several individuals of the senior generation. Rotation went often between two or more of the branches of the imperial house, thus more or less distant cousins succeeded each other. Emperor Go-Saga even decreed an official alternation between heirs of his two sons, which system continued for a couple of centuries (leading finally to shōgun-induced (or utilized) strife between these two branches, the "southern" and "northern" emperors). Towards the end, the alternates were very distant cousins counted in degrees of male descent (but all that time, intermarriages occurred within the imperial house, thus they were close cousins if female ties are counted). During the past five hundred years, however, probably due to Confucian influence, inheritance by sons - but not always, or even most often, the eldest son - has been the norm.
Historically, the
succession to Japan's
Chrysanthemum Throne has always passed to descendants in male line from the imperial lineage. Generally they've been males, though of the over one hundred monarchs there have been nine women (one pre-historical and eight historical) as Emperor on eleven occasions. See
the male line
of the Yamato dynasty.
Over a thousand years ago, a tradition started that an emperor should ascend relatively young. A dynast who has passed one's toddler years, was regarded suitable and old enough. Reaching the age of legal majority wasn't a requirement. Thus, a multitude of Japanese emperors have ascended as children, as young as 6 or 8 years old. The high-priestly duties were deemed possible for a walking child. A reign of around ten years was regarded a sufficient service. Being a child was apparently a fine property, to endure tedious duties and to tolerate subjugation to political powerfuls, as well as sometimes to cloak the real powerful members of the imperial dynasty. Almost all Japanese empresses and dozens of emperors abdicated, and lived the rest of their lives in pampered retirement, and/or influencing behind the curtains. Several emperors abdicated/reached their entitled retirement while still in their teens. These traditions show in Japanese folklore, theater, literature and other forms of culture, where the emperor is usually described or depicted as an adolescent.
Before the
Meiji Restoration, Japan had eleven reigns of
female tennō, or reigning empresses, all of them daughters of the male line of the Imperial House. None ascended purely as a wife or as a widow of an emperor. Imperial daughters and granddaughters, however, usually ascended the throne as a sort of a "stop gap" measure - if a suitable male wasn't available or some imperial branches were in rivalry so that a compromise was needed. Over half of Japanese empresses and many emperors abdicated once a suitable male descendant was considered to be old enough to rule (just past toddlerhood, in some cases). Four empresses,
Empress Suiko,
Empress Kōgyoku (also Empress Saimei) and
Empress Jitō, as well as the mythical empress
Jingu kogo, were widows of deceased emperors and princesses of the blood imperial in their own right. One,
Empress Gemmei, was the widow of a crown prince and a princess of the blood imperial. The other four,
Empress Genshō,
Empress Kōken (also Empress Shōtoku),
Empress Meishō and
Empress Go-Sakuramachi, were unwed daughters of previous emperors. None of these empresses married or gave birth after ascending the throne.
Article 2 of the 1889
Meiji Constitution (the Constitution of the Empire of Japan) stated, "The Imperial Throne shall be succeeded to by imperial male descendants, according to the provisions of the Imperial House Law." The 1889 Imperial Household Law fixed the succession on male descendants of the imperial line, and specifically excluded female descendants from the succession. In the event of a complete failure of the main line, the throne would pass to the nearest collateral branch, again in the male line. If the empress didn't give birth to an heir, the emperor could take a concubine, and the son he'd by that concubine would be recognized as heir to the throne. This law, which was promulgated on the same day as the
Meiji Constitution, enjoyed co-equal status with that constitution.
Article 2 of the
Constitution of Japan, promulgated in 1947 by influence of the US occupation administration and still in force, provides that "The Imperial Throne shall be dynastic and succeeded to in accordance with the Imperial Household Law passed by the Diet." The
Imperial Household Law of
16 January 1947, enacted by the ninety-second and last session of the Imperial Diet, retained the exclusion on female dynasts found in the 1889 law. The government of Prime Minister
Yoshida Shigeru hastily cobbled together the legislation to bring the Imperial Household in compliance with the American-written
Constitution of Japan that went into effect in May 1947. In an effort to control the size of the imperial family, the law stipulates that only legitimate male descendants in the male line can be dynasts; that imperial princes and princesses lose their status as Imperial Family members if they marry outside the Imperial Family; and that the Emperor and other members of the Imperial Family may not adopt children. It also prevented branches, other than the branch descending from Taisho, from being imperial princes any longer.
Current status
Succession is now regulated by laws passed by the
Japanese Diet. The current law excludes women from the succession. A change to this law had been considered until Princess
Kiko gave birth to a
son.
Until the birth of a son to
Prince Akishino on
September 6,
2006, there was a potential
succession crisis, since Prince Akishino was the only male child to be born into the imperial family since 1965. Following the birth of
Princess Aiko, there was some public debate about amending the current Imperial Household Law to allow women to succeed to the throne. This creates a logistical challenge as well as political: any change in the law would most likely mean a revision to allow the succession of the first born rather than the first-born son; however, the current emperor isn't the first born--he has elder sisters. In January 2005 Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi appointed a special panel composed of judges, university professors, and civil servants to study changes to the Imperial Household Law and to make recommendations to the government.
The panel dealing with the succession issue recommended on
October 25,
2005 amending the law to allow females of the male line of imperial descent to ascend the Japanese throne. On
January 20,
2006,
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi devoted part of his annual keynote speech to the controversy, pledging to submit a bill allowing women to ascend the throne to ensure that the succession continues in the future in a stable manner. However, shortly after the announcement that
Princess Kiko was pregnant with her third child, Koizumi suspended such plans. Her son,
Prince Hisahito, is the third in line to the throne under the current law of succession. On
January 3,
2007,
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced that he'd drop the proposal to alter the
Imperial Household Law.
(External Link
)
Royal's role Controversy
Japan's imperial family,
Prince Tomohito said about Royal's role, "If you ask me what the imperial family is all about, and I think and think and think about it, the very final conclusion is that our meaning lies in our simply existing," the prince said. The royals, he said, could fulfill their duties simply by "waking up in the morning, eating breakfast, eating lunch, eating dinner, then going to sleep, repeating that 365 days a year."
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