- Fushimi-no-miya house, all but one of them
being created by sons of Fushimi-no-miya
Kuniye.
Unless stated otherwise, each
prince is the son of his predecessor. The...
- Kuniie,
Prince Fushimi (伏見宮邦家親王, Fushimi-no-miya Kuniie-shinnō, 24
October 1802 – 5
August 1872) was ****anese royalty. He was the 20th/23rd
prince head...
- (father of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye) The Kuni-no-miya
house was
formed by
Prince Asahiko,
fourth son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye The Yamashina-no-miya house...
- by
Imperial Prince Yoshiaki, the
seventh son of
Prince Fushimi-no-miya
Kuniye, in 1872.
Prince Yoshiaki was
given the
title of komatsu-no-miya and changed...
-
house was
formed in 1871 by
Prince Asahiko,
fourth son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye, an
adopted son of
Emperor Ninkō and
later a
close advisor to
Emperor Kōmei...
-
house was
formed in 1871 by
Prince Akira,
eldest son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye, an
adopted son of
Emperor Kōkaku and
later of
Emperor Kōmei and an advisor...
- 16. Sadayoshi,
Prince Fushimi 8.
Kuniye,
Prince Fushimi 4. Asahiko,
Prince Kuni 9.
Torikoji Nobuko,
concubine 2. Morimasa,
Prince Nashimoto 5.
Harada Mitsue...
-
house was
formed by
Prince Satonari,
thirteenth son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye, in 1872. In 1947,
Prince Kitashirakawa Michihisa lost his
imperial status...
- Shōren-no-miya Sun'yu and Nagakawa-no-miya Asahiko), was a son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye (Fushimi-no-miya
Kuniie Shinnō), the head of one of ōke
branch houses of...
-
imperial family.
Prince Hirotsune was the
twelfth son of
Prince Fushimi Kuniye (1802–1875). Hirotsune's
father was the
twentieth head of the Fushimi-no-miya...