Empress Michiko

Birthday October 20, 1934

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Tokyo City, Japan

Age 89 years old

Nationality Japan

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Michiko (美智子) is a member of the Imperial House of Japan.

1934

Michiko Shōda was born on 20 October 1934 at the University of Tokyo Hospital in Bunkyō, Tokyo, the second of four children born to Hidesaburō Shōda (正田 英三郎 Shōda Hidesaburō; 1903–1999), president and later honorary chairman of Nisshin Flour Milling Company, and his wife, Fumiko Soejima (副島 富美子 Soejima Fumiko; 1909–1988).

Raised in Tokyo and in a cultured family, she grew up receiving a careful education, both traditional and "Western", learning to speak English and to play piano and being initiated into the arts such as painting, cooking and kōdō.

She has an older brother Iwao, a younger brother Osamu, and a younger sister Emiko.

1946

She returned to Tokyo in 1946 and completed her elementary education in Futaba and then attended the Sacred Heart School for Junior High School and High School in Minato, Tokyo.

1950

There had been several contenders for her hand in marriage in the 1950s.

Biographers of the writer Yukio Mishima, including Henry Scott Stokes, report that Mishima had considered marrying Michiko Shōda, and that he was introduced to her for that purpose some time in the 1950s.

During the 1950s, the media and most persons familiar with the Japanese monarchy had assumed that the powerful Imperial Household Agency would select a bride for the Crown Prince from the daughters of the former court nobility, or from one of the former branches of the Imperial Family.

Some traditionalists opposed the engagement, as Shōda came from a Catholic family, and although she was never baptized, she was educated at Catholic institutions and seemed to share the faith of her parents.

It was also widely rumored that Empress Kōjun had opposed the engagement.

1952

The young couple then moved to Tōgū Palace (東宮御所), or "East Palace", the traditional name of the official residence of the crown prince installed since 1952, located within the grounds of the Akasaka Estate in Motoakasaka, Minato, Tokyo.

1953

She graduated from high school in 1953.

1954

She is the niece of several academics, including Kenjirō Shōda, a mathematician who was the president of the University of Osaka from 1954 until 1960.

Shōda attended Futaba Elementary School in Kōjimachi, a neighborhood in Chiyoda, Tokyo, but was required to leave in her fourth grade year because of the American bombings during World War II.

She was then successively educated in the prefectures of Kanagawa (in the town of Katase, now part of the city of Fujisawa), Gunma (in Tatebayashi, home town of the Shōda family), and Nagano (in the town of Karuizawa, where Shōda had a second resort home).

1957

In 1957, Shōda graduated summa cum laude from the Faculty of Literature at the University of the Sacred Heart (a Catholic university in Tokyo) with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature.

Since she came from a particularly wealthy family, her parents were very selective about her suitors.

In August 1957, she met then-Crown Prince Akihito on a tennis court at Karuizawa near Nagano.

1958

The Imperial Household Council formally approved the engagement of the Crown Prince to Michiko Shōda on 27 November 1958.

At that time, the media presented their encounter as a real "fairy tale", or the "romance of the tennis court".

1959

Michiko married Crown Prince Akihito and became the Crown Princess of Japan in 1959.

She was the first commoner to marry into the Japanese Imperial Family.

She has had three children with her husband.

Her elder son, Naruhito, is the current emperor to the Chrysanthemum Throne.

As crown princess and later as empress consort, she has become the most visible and widely travelled imperial consort in Japanese history.

Upon Emperor Akihito's abdication, Michiko received the new title of Jōkōgō (上皇后), or Empress Emerita.

The engagement ceremony took place on 14 January 1959.

The future Crown Princess was the daughter of a wealthy industrialist, but she was still a commoner.

The wedding finally took place as a traditional Shinto ceremony on 10 April 1959.

The wedding procession was followed in the streets of Tokyo by more than 500,000 people spread over an 8.8 km route, while parts of the wedding were televised, thus making it the first imperial wedding to be made available for public viewership in Japan, drawing about 15 million viewers.

In accordance with tradition, Shōda received a personal emblem (o-shirushi (お印)): the white birch of Japan (Shirakaba (白樺)) upon admission to the imperial family.

1989

She was Empress of Japan as the wife of Akihito, the 125th Emperor of Japan reigning from 7 January 1989 to 30 April 2019.

They left Tōgū Palace after her husband acceded to the throne in 1989.

The couple have three children (two sons and a daughter):

2000

After the death of Empress Kōjun in 2000, Reuters announced that the former Empress was one of the strongest opponents of the marriage, and that in the 1960s, she had driven her daughter-in-law to depression by persistently accusing her of not being suitable for her son.

Death threats alerted the authorities to ensure the security of the Shōda family.

Yukio Mishima, known for his traditionalist position, said at the time: "The imperial system becomes 'tabloidesque' in its move toward democratization. It's all wrong—the idea (of the Imperial Family) losing its dignity by connecting with the people."

However, the young couple had by then gained wide public support.

That support also came from the ruling political class.

Additionally, everyone showed affection for the young "Mitchy" who had become the symbol of Japan's modernization and democratization (the media at the time hinted at the phenomenon of a "Mitchy boom").