Japanese Princess Yuriko, wartime Emperor Hirohito's sister-in-law, dies
at 101
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[November 15, 2024]
By MARI YAMAGUCHI
TOKYO (AP) — Japanese Princess Yuriko, the wife of wartime Emperor
Hirohito’s brother and the oldest member of the imperial family, has
died after her health deteriorated recently, palace officials said. She
was 101.
Yuriko died Friday at a Tokyo hospital, the Imperial Household Agency
said. It did not announce the cause of death, but Japanese media said
she died of pneumonia.
Born in 1923 as an aristocrat, Yuriko married at age 18 to Prince Mikasa,
the younger brother of Hirohito and the great-uncle of current Emperor
Naruhito, months before the start of World War II.
She has recounted living in a shelter with her husband and their baby
daughter after their residence was burned down in the U.S. fire bombings
of Tokyo in the final months of the war in 1945.
Yuriko raised five children and supported Mikasa’s research into ancient
Near Eastern history, while also serving her official duties and taking
part in philanthropic activities, including promotion of maternal and
child health. She outlived her husband and all three sons.
Her death reduces Japan’s rapidly dwindling imperial family to 16
people, including four men, as the country faces the dilemma of how to
maintain the royal family while conservatives in the governing party
insist on retaining male-only succession.
The 1947 Imperial House Law, which largely preserves conservative prewar
family values, allows only males to take the throne and forces female
royal family members who marry commoners to lose their royal status.
The youngest male member of the imperial family, Prince Hisahito — the
nephew of Emperor Naruhito — is currently the last heir apparent, posing
a major problem for a system that doesn’t allow empresses. The
government is debating how to keep succession stable without relying on
women.
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In this file photo provided by the Imperial Household Agency of
Japan, Princess Yuriko, wife of the late Prince Mikasa, poses for a
photo at her palace residence reception room in Tokyo, May 22, 2023.
(Imperial Household Agency via AP, File)
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, visiting South America to attend the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation and Group of 20 summits, issued a
statement expressing “heartfelt condolences.”
“I cannot help but feel saddened to hear of the loss. I extend my
heartfelt condolences along with other Japanese citizens,” Prime
Minister Shigeru Ishiba said in a statement.
Yuriko had lived a healthy life as a centenarian before suffering a
stroke and pneumonia in March. She enjoyed exercise in the morning
while watching a daily fitness program on television, the Imperial
Household Agency says. She also continued to read multiple
newspapers and magazines and enjoyed watching news and baseball on
TV. On sunny days, she sat in the palace garden or was wheeled in
her wheelchair.
Yuriko was hospitalized after her stroke and had been in and out of
intensive care since then. Her overall condition deteriorated over
the past week, the Imperial Household Agency said.
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