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  1. Kujō Michitaka (九条 道孝, June 11, 1839 – January 4, 1906), son of regent Kujō Hisatada and adopted son of his brother, Kujō Yukitsune, was a kuge or Japanese court noble of the late Edo period and politician of the early Meiji era who served as a member of the House of Peers.

  2. Kujō Michitaka Edit Profile. 九条 道孝. politician. Kujō Michitaka, son of regent Nijō Hisatada and adopted son of his brother Yukinori, was a kuge or Japanese court noble of the late Edo period and politician of the early Meiji era who served as a member of the House of Peers. Career.

  3. Kujo Michitaka (九条道孝) Michitaka KUJO (June 11, 1839-January 4, 1906) was Kugyo in the end of the Edo period. He was a politician in the Meiji period. He was Prince of Junior First Rank and a member of Kizokuin (the House of Peers). At first, his name Michitaka (道孝) was also written in other Chinese letters as 道隆.

  4. Sadako Kujō was born on 25 June 1884 in Tokyo, as the fourth daughter of Duke Michitaka Kujō, head of Kujō branch of the Fujiwara clan. Her mother was Ikuko Noma (Concubinage). She married then-Crown Prince Yoshihito (the future Emperor Taishō) on 10 May 1900, at the age of 15.

  5. About: Kujō Michitaka. Kujō Michitaka (九条 道孝, June 11, 1839 – January 4, 1906), son of regent Kujō Hisatada and adopted son of his brother, Kujō Yukitsune, was a kuge or Japanese court noble of the late Edo period and politician of the early Meiji era who served as a member of the House of Peers.

  6. Erdal Küçükyalçın. Ōtani Kōzui (1876–1948), a prominent figure of 20th century Japanese history, was the 22nd patriarch of the Honpa Honganji denomination of the Buddhist Jōdo Shinshū sect (True Pure Land or Shin Buddhism) and the chief-abbot of its head-temple, Western [Nishi] Honganji, Kyoto.

  7. (Kujō Michitaka; b. 5/10/Tenpō 10; d. 1/4/Meiji 39, age 68) Editorial Notes [Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project.]