Hvem daterte Meiji?
Sono Sachiko datert Meiji fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 15 år, 1 måneder og 20 dager.
Hamuro Mitsuko datert Meiji fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 0 år, 3 måneder og 0 dager.
Hashimoto Natsuko datert Meiji fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 3 år, 2 måneder og 29 dager.
Yanagiwara Naruko datert Meiji fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 6 år, 7 måneder og 23 dager.
Chigusa Kotoko datert Meiji fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 2 år, 8 måneder og 16 dager.
Meiji
Sono Sachiko
Meiji
Hamuro Mitsuko
Hamuro Mitsuko (葉室 光子; February 3, 1853 – September 22, 1873) was the first concubine of Emperor Meiji, and the mother of his first child Wakamitsuteru-hiko no Mikoto (稚瑞照彦尊). Wakamitsuteru-hiko no Mikoto was stillborn, and Mitsuko died of complications from his delivery five days later. Mitsuko was assisted in the delivery by Kusumoto Ine, the first woman doctor of western medical training in Japan.
Mitsuko's tomb is at Toshimagaoka Imperial Cemetery at Gokoku-ji in Bunkyo, Tokyo.
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Hashimoto Natsuko
Meiji
Yanagiwara Naruko
Yanagiwara Naruko (Japanese: 柳原愛子), also known as Sawarabi no Tsubone (26 June 1855 – 16 October 1943), was a Japanese lady-in-waiting of the Imperial House of Japan. A concubine of Emperor Meiji, she was the mother of Emperor Taishō and the last concubine of Japan and the last concubine to ever give birth to a reigning Emperor of Japan.
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Chigusa Kotoko
Chigusa Kotoko (千種任子, July 19, 1855 - February 1, 1944) was the fourth concubine of Emperor Meiji. She gave birth to two daughters who died of meningitis in infancy. Although Meiji was the last Japanese emperor to have more than one consort, the official role at court was not abolished until 1924; surviving concubines remained as members of the imperial family in retirement.
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