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Princess Inoe

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Empress consort of Japan
Inoe
Empress consort of Japan
Tenure770 – 772
Born717
Died775
SpouseEmperor Kōnin
Issue
HouseImperial House of Japan
FatherEmperor Shōmu
MotherAgatainukai no Hirotoji

Princess Inoe or Inoue (717–775) was the empress consort of Emperor Kōnin of Japan. She was deposed in 772, accused of witchcraft.

Biography

Inoue was the daughter of Emperor Shōmu, who reigned from March 3, 724 until August 19, 749. Her mother was Agatainukai no Hirotoji (県犬養広刀自), daughter of Agatainukai no Morokoshi. She was the sister of Prince Asaka (d. 744) and Princess Fuwa, and the half sister of Empress Kōken.

Princess Inoue married her relative, the future Emperor Kōnin, thereby uniting the Tenmu and Tenji line of the Imperial House. During the last reign of her half sister Empress Kōken (764-770), Inoue and her sister Fuwa where both involved in political plots with ambition to the succession of the throne: Fuwa wished to place her husband and sons on the throne, while Inoue wished to have her son Osabe appointed Crown Prince.

In 770, Inoue's spouse succeeded her half sister to the throne due to a fabricated will, after which Inoue was named Empress and her son named Crown Prince. In 772, Empress Inoue was suddenly deposed and arrested and accused for having used curses and black magic to promote her son to the throne, and shortly afterward, her son Prince Osabe was also arrested for complicity. Both Inoue and Osabe was stripped of their titles, banished and imprisoned in house arrest, for having performed curses and practising black magic. In 775, Inoue and her son both died in custody on the same day, presumably poisoned.

When the Emperor fell ill in 777, Inoue was believed to haunt him, and consequently, she was reinterred in an Imperial grave and rehabilitated; in 800, she was given back her title of Empress posthumously.

Issue

Legacy

Goryō Jinja in Gojō, Nara

Around 800, during the reign of Kammu, former Prince Yamabe, a shrine was built for her in Yamashiro Province (now Gojō, Nara), named Goryō Jinja. Princess Inoe is also venerated at its subsideries.

Notes

  1. Brown and Ishida. Gukanshō, pp. 276–277; Varley, H. Paul. Jinnō Shōtōki, pp. 147–148; Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du Japon, pp. 81–85., p. 81, at Google Books
  2. Imperial Household Agency (Kunaichō): 聖武天皇 (45)
  3. Herman Ooms, Imperial Politics and Symbolics in Ancient Japan: The Tenmu Dynasty, 650-800
  4. Karl Heinrich Menges, Nelly Naumann, Language and Literature: Japanese and the Other Altaic Languages : Studies ...
  5. Karl Heinrich Menges, Nelly Naumann, Language and Literature: Japanese and the Other Altaic Languages : Studies ...
  6. Herman Ooms, Imperial Politics and Symbolics in Ancient Japan: The Tenmu Dynasty, 650-800
  7. Ellen van Goethem, Nagaoka: Japan's Forgotten Capital
  8. Goethem, Ellen Van (2008). Nagaoka: Japan's forgotten capital. Brill Publishers via Google Books
Japanese royalty
Preceded byFujiwara Asukabehime Empress consort of Japan
770–772
Succeeded byFujiwara no Otomuro
Japan Empresses consort of Japan
Legendary
Jōmon
660 BC–291 BC
Yayoi
290 BC–269 AD
Yamato
Kofun
269–539
Asuka
539–710
Nara
710–794
Heian
794–1185
Kamakura
1185–1333
Northern Court
1333–1392
  • None
Muromachi
1333–1573
Azuchi-Momoyama
1573–1603
  • None
Edo
1603–1868
Empire of Japan
1868–1947
State of Japan
1947–present

Unless otherwise noted (as BC), years are in CE / AD  individuals that were given the title of empress posthumously individuals elevated to the rank of empress due to their position as honorary mother of the emperor Shōshi served briefly as honorary empress for her younger brother Emperor Go-Daigo

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