The Mikasa Family Thread


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Princess Akiko of Mikasa visited Fukui Prefecture October 2-3 for the 73rd National Sports Festival. She attended tennis, gymnastics, archery, and rowing competitions and visited the Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum. [fukuishimbun1, fukuishimbun2 ]

Only 1 photo from Fukui Shimbun so far.
https://fki.ismcdn.jp/mwimgs/4/5/600m/img_4596e50807e3fdad481469df5d01ab3c270289.jpg

ETA: found photos of Princess Akiko at the rowing competition on October 3rd! Yay!
Copied here:
ETA: Princess Akiko at the Kyudo (Japanese archery) competition and Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum.
Copied at:
 
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Princess Yoko visited Fukui Prefecture October 6-7 for the 73rd National Sports Festival. She attended karate, weight lifting, and softball competitions. Princess Yoko also visited Wakasa History Museum and Takahama Town Regional Museum.

Photo from the 6th: https://www.facebook.com/tsuruga.shicho/photos/pcb.304312320169147/304312296835816/?type=3&theater


Princess Nobuko visited Fukui Prefecture October 6-8 for the 73rd National Sports Festival. She attended archery, naginata, judo, and badminton competitions. Princess Nobuko also visited the Shirakawa Character Room, Literature Museum, Inayama Textiles, and Dinosaur Museum.

Photos: https://fki.ismcdn.jp/mwimgs/d/0/600m/img_d08ce9d6c1940c1276ae9107d6505362370348.jpg
https://ameblo.jp/hyakuo/image-12410383860-14280106984.html
http://fki.ismcdn.jp/mwimgs/3/3/-/img_333b11052ae9b8abeaca27e31f7cb31f526028.jpg
 
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On October 10th, Princess Akiko attended the 16th People's Self-Defense Force Awards ceremony at the Hotel Grand Hill Ichigaya in Shinjuku, Tokyo.

Photos: Sankei
 
Back on August 29th, Princess Akiko and students participated in weeding a rice field. (I assume the same farm where they planted rice in May). They had to be careful not to pull out the rice plants; weeding will make harvesting easier. Afterwards, they experienced "straw-beating" to prepare straw to be made into rope and other products.

Photos:

Princess Akiko's cultural organization Shinyusha will hold a wagashi workshop on October 21st at Nogi Shrine in Tokyo.

September 12th Facebook post looking for participants. Space is limited to 20 children and their parents/guardians.
 
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On October 13th, Princess Akiko delivered a lecture at "The Tale of Genji Seminar" at The Tale of Genji Museum in Uji, Kyoto Prefecture. The city’s Board of Education hosted the seminar and about 100 people attended.

The princess spoke about how to enjoy classical literature and the new insights she gained during her time at Oxford University. After a lecture by Japanese scholar, historian, and literary researcher Donald Keene, she decided to read "The Tale of Genji" in its original text and found beauty that was lost in modern Japanese translations.

Photos: kyoto-np.co.jp, Mainichi


On October 15th, Princess Akiko attended Kyoto Municipal Government's 120th anniversary ceremony at the ROHM Theatre Kyoto.

Photos: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DpmOev_UYAEW3dP.jpg
 
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On October 16th, Princess Akiko delivered a lecture for the special exhibition "Meiji 150 Years Anniversary - The Blossoming of Imperial Culture" at the Museum of Kyoto.

About 200 people listened to the transition of women's clothes from Empress Shōken's time to Heisei. Akiko would like to cherish what the Imperial house protects and adapt to the times. Her paper on court fashion is also published in the exhibition catalog. The exhibition is open until November 25th.

Photo: Mainichi

Video of the exhibition when it was in Akita City.
 
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This exhibition looks so internesting.
I didn´t know that Princess Akiko is so internested in (court) fashion history that she even delivered a lecture.
 
I wish the exhibition could come overseas. I'd love to see it.

Princess Akiko's academic career and research is focused on Japanese culture and history. She also established an organization, Shinyusha, to teach the next generation about Japanese culture. I'm sure the upcoming abdication will be special/momentous for everyone yet I wonder what Akiko thinks about it and if the abdication/succession will become research topics.


Princess Nobuko has a cold and cancelled a 3-day visit to Ibaraki Prefecture. She was supposed to attend events for Sakuragawa City and Chikusei City new hospital from October 13-15.

Sources: https://www.city.chikusei.lg.jp/page/page005235.html

Wishing the Princess a speedy recovery!
 
On October 17th, Princess Akiko received an honorary doctorate from Kokushikan University in Setagaya, Tokyo. At the award ceremony, she said "this is the first public evaluation of my research and activities. I am truly appreciative and grateful."

Source: Jiji
https://www.jiji.com/news/photos/photo_news/images/658/0028600795.jpg
https://www.jiji.com/news/photos/photo_news/images/658/0028600791.jpg


Found 2 events for Princess Yoko from September. :D

On September 8th, Princess Yoko attended the "13th 48 Hour Design Marathon in Tokyo" at Shibaura Institute of Technology.
Source: https://ameblo.jp/riyor1/entry-12403539616.html
https://stat.ameba.jp/user_images/20180908/18/riyor1/eb/2e/j/o1600089714262457420.jpg

On September 19th, Princess Yoko visited Shijonawate Gakuen in Daitō, Osaka Prefecture. She toured the campus, spoke at a special session for 6 year students, and participated in the Kendo club.
Photos: http://www.shijonawate-gakuen.ac.jp/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/gakuen.pdf

ETA: ANN video of Princess Akiko getting her honorary doctorate.

She recounted difficulties in research life. She became depressed after her father, the late Prince Tomohito, said he didn't understand what she was doing. Her grandfather, the late Prince Mikasa, also a historian, encouraged her to continue.

Source: https://news.tv-asahi.co.jp/news_society/articles/000138725.html
 
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From October 17-18th, Princess Yoko attended the Prince Tomohito Memorial Cup 20th Hokuriku Welfare Golf Tournament which was held in Ishikawa, Fukui, and Toyama Prefectures. 117 people participated; this year's tournament proceeds (about 1 million yen) was awarded to "Kobo Ao no Oka," an organization helping people with disabilities find employment.

Princess Yoko also visited NPO Smile Network Sakai in Sakai, Fukui Prefecture and "Goldwin Tech Lab" in Oyabe, Toyama Prefecture. Smile Network Sakai, a support organization for people with disabilities, was awarded the proceeds from last year's golf tournament.

Photo: chunichi.co.jp, webun.jp

ETA: Music therapy visit via fukuishimbun.co.jp
https://fki.ismcdn.jp/mwimgs/d/a/-/img_daa93ae22eb28b2f1284b2aa313c02c170029.jpg
 
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Princess Akiko, with Kabuki actors Nakamura Kankurō VI and Nakamura Shichinosuke II, held a workshop on October 27th for 250 children and adults at Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine in Kyoto. They are sons of late Kabuki actor Nakamura Kanzaburō XVIII, who was a close friend of Prince Tomohito. Both fathers died in 2012.

In the opening greetings, Akiko dedicated Kabuki at Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine and became emotional, wiping away tears.

Sources: Kyodo, Sankei Imperial Weekly #563

https://www.sankei.com/images/news/181102/lif1811020002-p13.jpg
https://www.sankei.com/images/news/181102/lif1811020002-p16.jpg
 
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More photos of Princess Akiko's October 21st Kabuki workshop at
On November 9th, Princess Yoko attended the opening ceremony of the 67th National Youth Conference at Nippon Seinen-Kan Hall in Tokyo.
Photos:
Princess Nobuko also visited Kikuyou Shokuniku Center (meat company) during her November 7-8 visit to Kumamoto Prefecture.
Photos: https://www.kikuyousyokuniku.jp/weblog/post-634/
 
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:previous: More photos of Princess Yoko at
Princess Nobuko visited Fukushima Prefecture November 19-21 to inspect recovery progress. She visited the prefecture creation environmental center in Miharu, Aquamarine Fukushima in Iwaki, Futaba Mirai Gakuen High School in Hirono and an elementary school in Namie.

It's her 4th visit to Fukushima since the 2011 earthquake and nuclear accident. Students and the princess discussed efforts to revitalize the prefecture's negative image following the disasters.

Video/photos: https://www.fnn.jp/posts/00068683FTV
minpo.jp 1
minyu-net.com
minpo.jp 2

Copied photos at
ETA: From September 10-11, Princess Nobuko visited Aichi Prefecture for the 27th welfare concert of AJU Independent Living.

Photo: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...nC2EpfSFQ2OP-ijYKz6oSnZ8sLe19LaweEAdx4BmAw-Kp
 
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Back on October 12th, Princess Akiko attended the 100th anniversary celebration of Kenichi Fukui's birth at Kyoto University. Kenichi Fukui was the first Asian scientist to receive a chemistry Nobel Prize, sharing the honor with Roald Hoffmann in 1981 for their independent investigations into the mechanisms of chemical reactions.

Photos: kyoto-u.ac.jp

http://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ja/social/events_news/department/fukui/news/2018/images/181012_1/04.jpg
http://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ja/social/events_news/department/fukui/news/2018/images/181012_1/05.jpg
 
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On October 18th, Princess Akiko gave a special lecture "To convey Japanese culture to the future” at Kokushikan University. About 220 students and faculty members attended the lecture and Q&A session. Princess Akiko discussed her graduate thesis, Japanese art, Western art differences, preservation, and cultural transfer.

After the lecture, Princess Akiko was presented with flowers.

Photos: https://www.kokushikan.ac.jp/current/news/details_12439.html
 
On December 4th, Princess Akiko and Kokugakuin University students attended a rice workshop where they cooked and ate the rice they planted in May and harvested in September. The menu featured rice, miso soup, pickled food, tsukudani, and nori.
Photos:
Princess Akiko's cultural organization Shinyusha will host a calendar workshop on January 27 at Tokyo Daijingu. Participants will use traditional paper, stencils, and ink to make the calendars. Space is limited to 30 people and children must be above 4th grade in elementary school. Application deadline: January 18 and if lottery is needed, applicants will be notified by January 21st.
Photos:
 
Found an English book review of Princess Akiko's 2015 book about her time at Oxford. I did not know she had tea with Queen Elizabeth. I wonder if other princesses (Tsuguko, Mako, Kako) met the Queen during their UK study abroad. I'm also super curious about what the IHA did to Akiko; was the agency pushing her to finish sooner or what?

Student life through the eyes of royalty - BCCJ Acumen By Yuuichiro Nakajima
[...] The author, Princess Akiko of Mikasa, is the elder daughter of the late Prince Tomohito of Mikasa, who, until his passing in June 2012, was honorary patron of the Japan-British Society.

Aka to Ao no Gaun is a collection of essays, written with a light touch and obvious candour, covering the princess’s two periods of study at Merton College, Oxford. She was initially there as an undergraduate in 2001–2, and then as a probationer research student and doctoral candidate for five years from 2004.

I met the princess in the mid-2000s through an introduction by a mutual friend, when I used to sing with, and manage, a choir in Tokyo. She had expressed an interest in joining the group and came to listen to us rehearsing. The interest was taken no further.

We then ran into each other near Mitsukoshi Department Store in Ginza; she recognised me before I did her. Soon thereafter, she graced one of our concerts with her presence. Through these brief encounters I formed a view of the princess as an easy-going young lady with a curious mind: qualities that come through well in her writing.

The book covers a period of six years, taking us through her time in the UK and the rest of Europe. She describes her initial struggle with the English language; life without a personal guard; going incognito; making friends; facing academic challenges; having tea with Her Majesty the Queen; travel nightmares on public transport; broadening her cooking repertoire; and organising Japanese art exhibitions. These are all covered, in addition to the principal theme of her post-graduate studies.

[...] the princess was initially confounded by the freedom she experienced as a university student away from home and vexed by the responsibilities that came with this.

Her second stay at Oxford seemed to harden her, however, as she was put through the rigors of proper academic research while taking care of herself without daily domestic support. She candidly refers to her close calls with pressure-induced nervous breakdowns, and is open about the hardship of doctoral work.

[...]

The book is as much about the princess’s time at Oxford as it is about her late father, whom she describes in the warmest tones. [...]

[...] While the princess is not entirely uncritical of her father, she directs her harshest criticism towards the Imperial Household Agency, whom she comes close to accusing of pedantry, being inconsiderate, and of obstinacy in their treatment of her at the end of her studies. [...]
From google translations of the book's reviews on Amazon Japan, readers found the princess a funny person, full of humor. They also connected with the struggles a student faces when studying abroad: language barriers, food issues, wanting to go home, etc. One review mentioned Princess Akiko visited the Crown Prince couple to learn about their study abroad experiences. The book is dedicated to her father, the late Prince Tomohito.
 
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Found an English book review of Princess Akiko's 2015 book about her time at Oxford. I did not know she had tea with Queen Elizabeth. I wonder if other princesses (Tsuguko, Mako, Kako) met the Queen during their UK study abroad. I'm also super curious about what the IHA did to Akiko; was the agency pushing her to finish sooner or what?

Student life through the eyes of royalty - BCCJ Acumen By Yuuichiro Nakajima

From google translations of the book's reviews on Amazon Japan, readers found the princess a funny person, full of humor. They also connected with the struggles a student faces when studying abroad: language barriers, food issues, wanting to go home, etc. One review mentioned Princess Akiko visited the Crown Prince couple to learn about their study abroad experiences. The book is dedicated to her father, the late Prince Tomohito.

This is a book I would love to read. I wish there were an English translation!
 
:previous: Me too!

Princess Akiko's cultural organization Shinyusha will hold an enthronement clothing workshop on Kamigamo Shrine in Kyoto on January 26, 2019. Titled "Welcome to world of costumes - Sokui no Rei," participants will learn about traditional Heian attire and get to wear the clothes.

Space is limited to 12 children
Deadline to apply: December 31, 2018
Approximate schedule for January 26:
12:30 reception
13:00 workshop starts
13:45 dressing begins
16:30 end
Attire: collar free clothes, pants. No skirts.

Facebook post/photo:
 
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