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List of kuge families

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of Kuge families include the high level bureaucrats and nobles (kuge) in the Japanese Imperial court.[1] This list is based on the lineage of the family (the clan from which the family derives, such as the Minamoto, Fujiwara, or Taira) and the kakaku (家格 [ja], rank). The kuge along with the daimyō made up the nobility (kazoku) of post-Meiji Restoration Japan. The kazoku was abolished shortly after World War II.

The kakaku consists of six ranks, from highest to lowest, they are Sekke (摂家), Seigake [ja] (清華家), Daijinke [ja] (大臣家), Urinke [ja] (羽林家), Meike [ja] (名家), and Hanke [ja] (半家).

Minamoto clan (Genji)

Seigake

  • Hirohata 廣幡家
  • Koga 久我家

Daijinke

  • Nakanoin 中院家

Urinke

  • Ayanokōji 綾小路家
  • Chigusa 千種家
  • Higashikuze 東久世家
  • Iwakura 岩倉家
  • Kuze 久世家
  • Niwata 庭田家
  • Ōhara 大原家
  • Otagi 愛宕家
  • Rokujō 六條家
  • Uematsu 植松家
  • Umedani 梅溪家

Hanke

  • Itsutsuji 五辻家
  • Jikōji 慈光寺家
  • Takenouchi 竹内家

Fujiwara clan

Originally, the Fujiwara four families (藤原四家) were branches established by the four sons of Fujiwara no Fuhito:[2] Nanke, Hokke, Shikike, and Kyōke.[3] Hokke later became the most successful out of the four families, and there are five main branches from Hokke, known as the Sekke,[4] otherwise known as Five regent houses:

And other cadet branches of Fujiwara, becoming one of Kuge, include:

Seigake

  • Daigo 醍醐家
  • Imadegawa (renamed Kikutei) 今出川(菊亭)家
  • Kasannoin 花山院家
  • Ōinomikado 大炊御門家
  • Saionji 西園寺家
  • Sanjō 三條家
  • Tokudaiji 德大寺家

Daijinke

  • Sanjōnishi 三條西家
  • Ōgimachinosanjō (renamed Saga) 正親町三條(嵯峨)家
  • Nakanoin 中院家

Urinke

  • Aburanokōji 油小路家
  • Anegakōji 姉小路家
  • Ano 阿野家
  • Asukai 飛鳥井家
  • Fujitani 藤谷家
  • Hachijō 八條家
  • Hanazono 花園家
  • Hashimoto 橋本家
  • Higashizono 東園家
  • Higuchi 樋口家
  • Hinonishi 日野西家
  • Horikawa 堀河家
  • Imaki 今城家
  • Irie 入江家
  • Ishiyama 石山家
  • Iwano 石野家
  • Jimyōin 持明院家
  • Kawabata 河鰭家
  • Kazahaya 風早家
  • Kushige 櫛笥家
  • Machijiri 町尻家
  • Matsunaga 松永家
  • Matsunoki 松木家
  • Mibu 壬生家
  • Minase 水無瀬家
  • Mushanokōji 武者小路家
  • Nakayama 中山家
  • Nakazono 中園家
  • Nanba 難波家
  • Nishiōji 西大路家
  • Nishiyotsutsuji 西四辻家
  • Nonomiya 野宮家
  • Ōgimachi 正親町家
  • Ogura 小倉家
  • Omiya 大宮家
  • Oshikōji 押小路家
  • Reizei (Reizen, Kaminoreizei) 冷泉家
  • Rokkaku 六角家
  • Sakurai 櫻井家
  • Shichijō family 七條家
  • Shigenoi 滋野井家
  • Shijō 四條家
  • Shimizudani 清水谷家 
  • Shimonoreizei 下冷泉家
  • Sono 園家
  • Sonoike 園池家
  • Takamatsu 高松家
  • Takano 高野家
  • Takaoka 高丘家
  • Umezono 梅園家
  • Uratsuji 裏辻家
  • Washio 鷲尾家 
  • Yabu 藪家
  • Yamamoto 山本家
  • Yamanoi 山井家
  • Yamashina 山科家
  • Yotsutsuji 四辻家

Meika

  • Bōjō family 坊城家
  • Hamuro 葉室家
  • Hino 日野家
  • Hinonishi 日野西家
  • Hirohashi 廣橋家
  • Honami 穂波家
  • Ikegami 池尻家
  • Kadenokōji 勘解由小路家
  • Kajūji 勧修寺家
  • Kanroji 甘露寺家
  • Karasumaru 烏丸家
  • Kitanokōji 北小路家
  • Madenokōji 万里小路家
  • Mimurodo 三室戸家
  • Nakamikado 中御門家
  • Okazaki 岡崎家
  • Seikanji 清閑寺家
  • Shibayama 芝山家
  • Takeya 竹屋家
  • Toyama 外山家
  • Toyooka 豊岡家
  • Tsutsumi 堤家
  • Umenokōji 梅小路家
  • Uramatsu 裏松家
  • Yanagiwara 柳原家

Hanke

  • Karahashi 唐橋家
  • Shirakawa 白川家
  • Takakura 高倉家 
  • Tominokōji 富小路家 
  • Nishikikōji 錦小路家

Taira clan (Heishi)

Meika

  • Hiramatsu 平松家
  • Katano 交野家
  • Nagatani 長谷家

Hanke

  • Iwai 石井家
  • Nishinotōin 西洞院家

Others

Hanke

References

  1. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Kuge" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 570.
  2. ^ Nussbaum, "Fujiwara no Fuhito" at p. 202.
  3. ^ Brinkley, Frank and Dairoku Kikuchi. (1915). A History of the Japanese People from the Earliest Times to the End of the Meiji Era, p. 203., p. 203, at Google Books; excerpt, "Muchimaro's home, being in the south (nan) of the capital, was called Nan-ke; Fusazaki's, being in the north (hoku), was termed Hoku-ke; Umakai's was spoken of as Shiki-ke, since he presided over the Department of Ceremonies (shiki), and Maro's went by the name of Kyō-ke, this term also having reference to his office."
  4. ^ Nussbaum, "Go-sekke" at p. 260.
  5. ^ Papinot, Jacques Edmond Joseph. (1906). Dictionnaire d’histoire et de géographie du Japon; Papinot, (2003). "Ichijō," Nobiliare du Japon, p. 13; retrieved 2013-8-13.
  6. ^ Papinot, (2003). "Konoe," Nobiliare du Japon, p. 24; retrieved 2013-8-13.
  7. ^ Papinot, (2003). "Kujō" at p. 25; retrieved 2013-8-13.
  8. ^ Papinot, (2003). "Nijō" at p. 42; retrieved 2013-8-13.
  9. ^ Papinot, (2003). "Takatsukasa" at p. 58; retrieved 2013-8-13.
This page was last edited on 20 March 2024, at 05:54
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