Fujiwara no Kanshi
Fujiwara no Kanshi 藤原歓子 | |
---|---|
Empress dowager of Japan | |
Tenure | 1074–1102 |
Born | 1021 |
Died | 1102 (aged 80–81) |
Spouse | Emperor Go-Reizei |
House | Yamato |
Father | Fujiwara no Norimichi |
Mother | Fujiwara no Kintō |
Fujiwara no Kanshi (藤原歓子, 1021–1102), also known as Ono no Kōtaigō (小野皇太后) was an empress consort of Emperor Go-Reizei of Japan. Her given name can also be read Yoshiko.
Life
She was the third daughter of Fujiwara no Norimichi. Her mother was the eldest daughter of Fujiwara no Kintō. In 1024, when Kanshi was only four years old, her mother died.
Consort
In 1047, after the enthronement of Emperor Go-Reizei, Kanshi entered his court. In 1049, they had a son, but he was either stillborn or died shortly after birth.
After Fujiwara no Hiroko entered the court in 1050, Hiroko was proclaimed empress consort in spite of Kanshi's seniority, and Kanshi began to seclude herself in her estate. From 1051 onward, she lived with her brother Jōen, a monk, in Ono at the base of Mount Hiei, spending her days in Buddhist prayer.
According to the Eiga Monogatari, Kanshi was known as a small and graceful beauty, proficient with the biwa and at painting, particularly in the Tang style. Although she was the only one of Go-Reizei's wives who ever bore him a child, Princess Shōshi was protected by the emperor's grandmother Jōtōmon-in, and Fujiwara no Hiroko was the daughter of the long-established regent Fujiwara no Yorimichi, and so those two dominated the harem. Fortune never favored her until right before the death of her husband.
In 1068, with the Emperor on his deathbed, Kanshi was finally named kōgō. This came on top of the investitures of
Later life
In 1074, Kanshi gained the title of empress dowager, and in 1077 she became a nun. In 1102 she became sick, and died three months later in her mountain retreat in Ono at the age of 82.
A famous anecdote states that in 1091, late in Kanshi's life, as she was living out her remaining days at her retreat in Ono, the retired
References
- 角川書店出版の『平安時代史事典』で採られた角田文衞の説 (in Japanese)
- 『大日本史料』2編902冊~3編6冊 (in Japanese)