Imperial Household Law
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Imperial Household Law of 1947 (皇室典範 Kōshitsu Tempan?) is a statute in Japanese law that governs the line of imperial succession, the membership of the imperial family, and several other matters pertaining to the administration of the Imperial Household.
Contents |
[edit] Passage of the Law
It was passed during the Showa era on January 16, 1947, by the last session of the Imperial Diet. This law superseded the Imperial Household Law of 1889, which had enjoyed co-equal status with the Constitution of the Empire of Japan and could only be amended by the emperor. The revised statute is clearly subordinate to the Constitution of Japan, which went into effect on May 3, 1947. It develops Chapter 1: Article 2 of The Constitution of Japan which states: "The Imperial Throne shall be dynastic and succeeded to in accordance with the Imperial House Law passed by the Diet" [1].
[edit] Drafting and intent
Drafted by the government of Prime Minister Yoshida Shigeru during the American occupation, the 1947 statute sought to bring the legislation governing the Imperial Household into compliance with the American-written Constitution.
The law had the effect of dramatically restricting membership in the imperial family to the Emperor Hirohito's immediate family, his widowed mother, and the families of his three brothers. It abolished the collateral lines of the imperial family, the shinnoke and the oke, which had traditionally a pool of potential successors to the throne if the main imperial family failed to produce an heir. The fifty-one members of the eleven cadet branches renounced their Imperial status; and they were formally removed from the imperial household register and become ordinary citizens on October 14, 1947.[2]
The new law retained the principle of agnatic succession enshrined in the 1889 law and the Meiji Constitution. The new law further restricted the succession to legitimate-born sons, grandsons, and male line descendants of an emperor. Previously, an emperor's sons and grandsons born by concubines and their male line descendants could succeed to the throne. Although Imperial chronologies include eight reigning empresses in the course of Japanese history, their successors were most often selected from amongst the males of the paternal Imperial bloodline, which is why some conservative scholars argue that the women's reigns were temporary and that male-only succession tradition must be maintained in the 21st century.[2] Empress Gemmei (661-721), who was followed on the throne by her daughter, Empress Genshō (680-678), remains the sole exception to this conventional argument.
In addition, the law contained numerous mechanisms to regulate the future size of the imperial family, and thus the financial burden on the state.
The chapters of the Imperial Household Law address the following:
- The order of succession to the throne;
- The establishment of a regency should the emperor be a minor or suffer from a serious ailment
- The membership of the imperial family
- The composition of the Imperial Household Council
- The titles and styles held by the emperor and members of the imperial family
- The marriages of the emperor, the crown prince, and the princes of the blood; and,
- The rites for imperial funerals, imperial mausoleua, and the maintenance of the imperial family registry.
Chapter 1: Article 1 of the Imperial Household Law states: "The Imperial Throne of Japan shall be succeeded to by legitimate male descendants in the male line of Imperial Ancestors".[3] The line of succession is detailed in Article 2 as:
- The eldest son of the Emperor
- The eldest son of the Emperor's eldest son
- Other descendants of the eldest son of the Emperor
- The second son of the Emperor and his descendants
- Other descendants of the Emperor
- Brothers of the Emperor and their descendants
- Uncles of the Emperor and their descendants.[3]
[edit] See also
- Emperor of Japan
- Imperial House of Japan
- Japanese imperial succession controversy
- Masako, Crown Princess of Japan
- Princess Akishino
[edit] References
- ^ The Constitution Of Japan
- ^ a b "Life in the Cloudy Imperial Fishbowl," Japan Times. March 27, 2007.
- ^ a b The Imperial Household Law of 1947
[edit] External links
- The Constitution of Japan
- The Imperial Household Law of 1947
- Japanese Editorial Excerpts - Japan Policy & Politics, 29 December 2004