Prince Higashikuni

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Prince and former Prime Minister Higashikuni in old age, n/d

Prince Higashikuni (Naruhiko) of Japan (東久邇 稔彦 Higashikuni Naruhiko, also Higashikuni no miya Naruhiko ō (東久邇宮 稔彦王)) (3 December 188726 January 1990) was the 43rd Prime Minister of Japan from 17 August 1945 to 9 October 1945, a period of 54 days. An uncle of Emperor Shōwa twice over, Prince Higashikuni was the only member of the Japanese imperial family to head a cabinet. He also had the shortest tenure of any Japanese prime minister.

Contents

Early Life

Prince Naruhiko was born in Kyoto, the ninth son of Prince Kuni Asahiko (Kuni no miya Asahiko Shinnō) and the court lady Terao Utako. His father, Prince Asahiko (also known as Shōren no miya Sun'yu and Nagakawa no miya Asahiko), was a son of Prince Fushimi Kuniie (Fushimi no miya Kuniie Shinnō), the twentieth head of the Fushimi no miya, the oldest of the Shinnoke or cadet branches of the imperial dynasty from whom an emperor might be chosen in default of a direct heir. Prince Naruhiko was a half-brother of Prince Kuni Kuniyoshi, the father of the future Empress Kojun, the wife of Emperor Showa. His other half-brothers, Prince Asaka, Prince Nashimoto, and Prince Kaya, all formed new branches of the imperial family during the Meiji period.

Marriage and Family

Emperor Meiji granted Prince Naruhiko the title Higashikuni no miya (Prince Higashikuni) and permission to start a new branch of the imperial family on 3 November 1906. Prince Higashikuni married the ninth daughter of Emperor Meiji, Princess Toshiko (11 May 18965 March 1978), on 18 May 1915. The couple had four sons. Their eldest son, Prince Morihiro of Higashikuni (Mr. Higashikuni Morihiro from October 1947) (6 May 19161 February 1969), married Princess Shigeko (9 December 192523 June 1961), the eldest daughter of Emperor Shōwa and Empress Kojun. The other sons were:

  1. Prince Moromasa (Moromasa ō) (1917 - 1 September 1923); died in the Great Kanto Earthquake.
  2. Prince Akitsune (Akitsune ō), (born 13 May 1920), renounced imperial title and created Marquis Awata, 1940; lost title with enforcement of current Japanese Constitution; 3 May 1947 and adopted the surname Awata.
  3. Prince Toshihiko (Toshihiko ō), (born 24 March 1929, renounced imperial title and created Count Tarama, 1943; lost title with enforcement of current Japanese Constitution; 3 May 1947 and adopted the surname Tarama; relocated to city of Lins, Brazil, 1950.

Military Career and Tenure as Prime Minister

Before his brief tenure as prime minister, Prince Higashikuni was a career army officer. After graduating from the Imperial Military Academy (1908) and the Army War College (1914), he studied at the Ecole Supérieure de Guerre in Paris from 1920 to 1922. Upon his return to Japan, he eventually rose to the rank of general, having successively served as commander of the Fifth Infantry Brigade (1930–34), the Fourth Army Division (1934–37), the Military Aviation Department (1937–38), and the Second Army in China (1938–39). A member of the Supreme War Council from 1939, the prince served as commander of the Home Defense Command from 1941 to 1944. He colluded with several aristocrats and fellow imperial family members to oust General Tojo Hideki as prime minister following the fall of Saipan in 1944.

Emperor Shōwa appointed Prince Higashikuni to the position of prime minister on 16 August 1945, replacing Admiral Suzuki Kantaro. The mission of the Higashikuni cabinet was two-fold: first, to ensure the orderly cessation of hostilities and demobilization of the Japanese armed forces; and second, to reassure the Japanese people that the imperial institution remained secure. He resigned in October over a dispute with the American occupation forces over the repeal of the 1925 Peace Preservation Law.

Life as a Commoner

Higashikuni lost his princely title and membership in the imperial family as a result of the American occupation reform of the Japanese imperial household in October 1947. As a private citizen, he operated several unsuccessful retail enterprises and briefly served as the chief priest of a new religious order, Higashikuni-Kyo, that was subsequently banned by American occupation authorities. The former prince became the honorary chair of the International Martial Arts Federation (IMAF) in 1957, honorary president of the Japan Shepherd Dog Association and several other organizations. In 1958, Higashikuni published his wartime journals under the title, Ichi Kozuko no senso Nikki (or The War Diary of a Member of the imperial family). He published his memoirs, Higashikuni Nikki (Higashikuni's Memoirs), in 1968. Former Prince Higashikuni Naruhiko died in Tokyo on 20 January 1990 at the age of 102. He outlived his wife, two of his sons, all of his siblings, and his nephew, the Shōwa Emperor. Higashikuni is mainly remembered as Japan's first postwar prime minister.

Preceded by:
Kantaro Suzuki
Prime Minister of Japan
1945
Succeeded by:
Kijuro Shidehara

ja:東久邇宮稔彦王

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