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・ Fujiya & Miyagi
・ Fujiya Co.
・ Fujiya Hotel
・ Fujiyama (roller coaster)
・ Fujiyama Station
・ Fujiwara no Asatada
・ Fujiwara no Atsutada
・ Fujiwara no Chōshi
・ Fujiwara no Fuhito
・ Fujiwara no Fusasaki
・ Fujiwara no Fuyutsugu
・ Fujiwara no Genshi
・ Fujiwara no Hamanari
・ Fujiwara no Hidehira
・ Fujiwara no Hidesato
Fujiwara no Hiroko
・ Fujiwara no Hirotsugu Rebellion
・ Fujiwara no Ietaka
・ Fujiwara no Ikushi
・ Fujiwara no Ishi
・ Fujiwara no Junshi
・ Fujiwara no Kamatari
・ Fujiwara no Kanefusa
・ Fujiwara no Kaneie
・ Fujiwara no Kanemichi
・ Fujiwara no Kanesuke
・ Fujiwara no Kanezane
・ Fujiwara no Kanshi
・ Fujiwara no Kenshi (Sanjō)
・ Fujiwara no Kenshi (Shirakawa)


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Fujiwara no Hiroko : ウィキペディア英語版
Fujiwara no Hiroko

, also known as , was an empress consort of Japan. She was the eldest daughter of Fujiwara no Yorimichi. Her mother was Fujiwara no Gishi. She became the consort of Emperor Go-Reizei. Fujiwara no Morozane was her brother by the same mother.
At the time, the matrilineal bloodline was very important in Japanese noble society. Hiroko's mother Gishi's hazy background might have put her at a disadvantage, but to her father she was a long-awaited daughter. Especially after the early death of her adopted sister Fujiwara no Genshi in 1039, Yorimichi expected Hiroko to give birth to an imperial prince, and so sent her to the court of Emperor Go-Reizei in 1050. A year later, in 1051, she became ''kōgō''. Normally, the existing imperial wife Princess Shōshi would have taken the position, but Shōshi remained in the position of ''chūgū'' by her own preference. With her father's powerful protection, Hiroko maintained a flashy palace and held poetry competitions.
However, despite her father's great expectations and the Emperor's affection, Hiroko proved unable to bear children. In 1068, Fujiwara no Kanshi became a ''kōgō'', and Hiroko took the position of ''chūgū''. After Emperor Go-Reizei's death in the same year, Hiroko became a nun. By her late years in the early 12th century, the golden age of the Sekkan system was past. However, Hiroko's connection to its central figures, including her father Yorimichi and her aunt Fujiwara no Shōshi, earned her respect from her family as a remnant of that tradition.
Fujiwara no Hiroko died in her secondary residence in Uji in 1127, at the age of 92.
==Notes==




抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Fujiwara no Hiroko」の詳細全文を読む



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