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was a Japanese noble and statesman of the Nara period. He was originally known as . He reached the court rank of and the position of ''udaijin'', and was posthumously promoted to . He was also called . == Life == In 761, Korekimi was promoted from to . After his uncle Fujiwara no Nakamaro's rebellion in 764, Korekimi served successively as governor of Harima Province and Yamashiro Province. He rose rapidly in the court of Empress Shōtoku. In 765 he was promoted to and of the imperial guard, and changed his name from Kuromaro to Korekimi. In 766 he was promoted again to . His rise continued under Emperor Kōnin, and he was promoted to in 773, and in 774 joined the ranks of the ''kugyō'' with a promotion to ''sangi''. In 779 he was promoted to . In this period, while holding important posts in the imperial guard and ''daijō-kan'', he also supported Prince Yamabe, the future Emperor Kanmu, as . Shortly after Kanmu's ascension to the throne in 781, a number of important officials since Kōnin's time, including ''sadaijin'' Fujiwara no Uona, ''udaijin'' Ōnakatomi no Kiyomaro, ''dainagon'' Isonokami no Yakatsugu, and ''udaijin'' Fujiwara no Tamaro, died or left office, and Korekimi was again rapidly promoted. In 781 he was promoted to and ''chūnagon'', in 782 to ''dainagon'', and in 783 to ''udaijin'', making him the most powerful man in the ''daijō-kan''. Korekimi died in 789, at the age of 63. His rank at the time of his death was , and he held positions both as ''udaijin'' and as a general in the imperial guard. He was posthumously promoted to . 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 Korekimi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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