-
Northern dynasty is also
referred to as the "senior line" or the
Jimyōin line (持明院統,
Jimyōin-tō); Jimyō-in was a
temple and
retirement residence of this line's...
- father, the
Jimyōin-tō
Emperor Go-****akusa. In 1287,
retired Emperor Go-****akusa,
dissatisfied with the fact that his own
lineage (the
Jimyōin-tō) did not...
- (裕仁) He was the
second son of
Emperor Go-****akusa. They were from the
Jimyōin-tō line. Empress:
Saionji (Fujiwara)
Shoshi (西園寺(藤原)鏱子)
later Ei****umon’In...
- (胤仁親王). He was the
eldest son of
Emperor Fushimi. They
belonged to the
Jimyōin-tō
branch of the
Imperial Family.
Court Lady:
Saionji (Fujiwara) Neishi...
-
Imperial proclamation in 1286. In 1296, he
became crown prince (heir) to the
Jimyōin-tō
Emperor Go-Fushimi, his
second cousin. 2
March 1301 (Shōan 3, 21st day...
- sent the
imperial regalia to the
Ashikaga side.
Takauji enthroned the
Jimyōin-tō emperor, Kōmyō, and
officially began his
shogunate with the enactment...
- (尊性法親王) Lady-in-waiting (Naishi-no-Suke):
Fujiwara (
Jimyōin)
Motoko (藤原持明院 基子; d. 1644),
daughter of
Jimyōin Motonori (持明院基孝)
Sixth Son:
Imperial Prince Tsuneyoshi...
- (開盛堂)
established in 1885
became famous for it.
Because a
certain Viscount Jimyōin wrote a waka poem
about the
confection which mentioned hime-yuri "princess...
- of
succession would "swap"
between two
family lines: the
Jimyōin and the Daikakuji. A
Jimyōin emperor would be
followed by a
Daikakuji emperor, and so...
-
becoming the 8th
Kamakura shōgun
among other things, the
position of his
Jimyōin-tō
became strengthened. In 1304, he died. He is
enshrined with
other emperors...