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Princess Yuriko, Japan's Oldest Royal, Dies at 101
Image credit: KAZUHIRO NOGI/Staff/AFP via Getty Images

Princess Yuriko, Japan's Oldest Royal, Dies at 101

Princess Yuriko, the oldest member of Japan's royal family and great-aunt of Emperor Naruhito, passed away at age 101 in a Tokyo hospital following complications from pneumonia and a stroke....

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by Improve the News Foundation

Facts

  • Princess Yuriko, the oldest member of Japan's royal family and great-aunt of Emperor Naruhito, passed away at age 101 in a Tokyo hospital following complications from pneumonia and a stroke.[1][2]
  • In March, she was treated for a mild stroke and aspiration pneumonitis, but the latest medical tests showed a decline in her cardiac and kidney functions. She died Friday at 6:32 am local time.[3]
  • The princess, who married Prince Mikasa at age 18, survived the US firebombing of Tokyo in 1945, taking shelter with her husband and baby daughter after their residence was destroyed.[4][5]
  • She had lived a healthy life as a centenarian, actively engaged in philanthropic activities while fulfilling her royal duties, and played a significant role in the Japanese Red Cross Society.[1][6]
  • Her passing reduces Japan's imperial family to 16 members. According to the Imperial Household Law of 1947, members of the imperial line can inherit the Chrysanthemum throne only if they're male.[2][7]
  • Since Princess Yuriko, Prince Mikasa, and their three sons have passed away, Emperor Naruhito's 18-year-old nephew, Prince Hisahito, is the last heir apparent.[8]

Sources: [1]CNN, [2]South China Morning Post, [3]Kyodo News+, [4]Associated Press, [5]Japantimes, [6]The Times of India, [7]New York Times and [8]CBS.

Narratives

  • Narrative A, as provided by The Pinnacle Gazette. The dwindling number of male heirs threatens the Japanese imperial family's very survival, and excluding capable female members from succession ignores modern democratic values. Allowing female succession would solve the crisis while aligning the monarchy with contemporary Japanese society.
  • Narrative B, as provided by Kyodo News+. The traditional male-only succession system preserves centuries of Japanese imperial tradition and cultural values that have sustained the world's oldest continuous monarchy. The current system maintains the purity and stability of the imperial line through clear, established rules that have worked for generations.

Predictions

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by Improve the News Foundation

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