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May 19, 2012 |
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Image:Empress_Shoken.jpg|thumb|260px| Empress Sh??ken in Western garb, a sign of the reform taken under the Meiji era HIM Empress Sh??ken ??????????????? (jp: sh??ken k??taigo), n??e Ichij?? Haruko ???????????? (born Ichij?? Masako ???????????? 28 May 1849 or 1850 - died 19 April 1914) was the k??g?? (empress-consort) of the Meiji Emperor (1852-1912, reigned 1862-1912). She was also known as Empress Haruko. She was the third daughter of Lord Ichijō Tadaka, sometime Minister of the Left (Sadaijin), head of the Ichijo branch of the House of the Fujiwara. Her original given name was Masako and she adopted the name Haruko at her marriage to Emperor Meiji. On 2 September 1867, the Emperor Meiji married the young Lady Haruko. She is said to have been diminutive in size and serenely beautiful. Known posthumously as Empress Sh??ken, she was the first imperial consort to receive the title of k??g?? (literally, the emperor's wife, translated as Empress consort), in several hundred years. Although she was the first Japanese empress consort to play a public role, she bore no children. Emperor Meiji had fifteen children by five official ladies-in-waiting. She assumed the role of helping the poor and promoted national welfare and women???s education. She was therefore also called the ???Mother of the Nation???. During the first Sino-Japanese War (1894-95), she also worked for the establishment of the Japan Red Cross Society. Especially concerned about Red Cross activities in peace time, she created a fund for the International Red Cross, which was named ???The Empress Shoken Fund???. It is presently used for international welfare activities. as has long been the custom in Japanese monarchy, she adopted Yoshihito, her husband's son by a concubine. Yoshihito thus became the official heir to the throne, and at Meiji's death, succeeded (Taisho Emperor). Haruko Kogo was granted the title Shoken Kogo by her stepson, her adopted son Emperor Yoshihito. She passed away in 1914, and was buried in the East Mount of the Fushimi Momoyama Ryo in Kyoto, her soul being enshrined in Meiji Jingu (Meiji Shrine) in Tokyo. She is posthumously known as Empress Sh??ken - or also as Empress Dowager Sh??ken, since her husband died before she did. The railway-carriage of the empress, as well of the Meiji Emperor, can be seen today in the Meiji Mura Museum, close to Nagoya, Chubu Region. http://www.meijijingu.or.jp/english/intro/emperor/ Meiji Jingu | Empress Shoken http://www.redcross.org.sg/IntSvc_empressfund.htm Red Cross | The Empress Shoken Fund Category:1849 births|Shoken, Empress Category:1914 deaths|Shoken, Empress Category:Empresses|Shoken, Empress Dowager Category:Japanese monarchy|Shoken, Empress Dowager Category:Yamato line|Shoken, Empress Dowager ja:??????????????? This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Empress Shoken".
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