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Prince Nagaya

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Name
  
Prince Nagaya

Role
  
Politician

Spouse
  
Princess Chinu


Prince Nagaya

Children
  
Prince Kashiwade (?-729), Prince Katsuragi (?-729), Prince Kagitori (?-729), Prince Kuwata (?-729), Prince Asukabe, Prince Kibumi (?-757), Prince Yamashiro (Fujiwara no Otosada) (?-763), Princess Kyosho, Princess Kamo, Princess Madokata (?-774)

Died
  
March 20, 729 AD, Nara, Nara Prefecture, Japan

Parents
  
Princess Minabe, Prince Takechi

Grandparents
  
Emperor Tenji, Emperor Tenmu

Great-grandparents
  
Empress Kogyoku, Emperor Jomei

Similar People
  

Nagaya (長屋王 Nagaya-no-ōkimi) (684 – 20 March 729) was a politician of the Nara period and an imperial prince of Japan, a son of Prince Takechi (grandson of Emperor Tenmu).

Contents

Prince Nagaya Prince Nagaya The life of a nobleman of the Nara Period Heritage

His father was Prince Takechi and his mother Princess Minabe (a daughter of Emperor Tenji and Empress Genmei's sister). He married Princess Kibi (his cousin, a daughter of Empress Genmei and Empress Genshō's sister).

Prince Nagaya Prince Nagaya Wikiwand

He was substantially influential in politics owing to his membership of the Imperial family of the most noble birth, and there were no other competitive Imperial members at that time. A large residence was allocated to him in a prestigious part of Heijō-kyō.

Prince Nagaya kirinukecomwpcontentuploadsprincenagaya03gif

The Fujiwara clan were the most powerful competitors of Nagaya. Fujiwara no Fuhito, the leader of the house, had been the most powerful courtier in the court in the days when Japan was under the reign of Empress Genshō, a cousin of Nagaya's. After Fuhito's death in 720, Nagaya seized complete power within the court. This power shift was the source of later conflicts between him and Fuhito's four sons (Muchimaro, Fusasaki, Maro and Umakai) in the reign of Emperor Shōmu.

In 729, the four sons charged him with a false crime and Nagaya received the death penalty. He was forced to commit suicide. His wife, Princess Kibi, and his children were killed at the same time.

Wives and children

  • Princess Kibi (?–729)
  • Prince Kashiwade (?–729)
  • Prince Katsuragi (?–729)
  • Prince Kagitori (?–729)
  • A lady of Ishikawa clan
  • Prince Kuwata (?–729)
  • Fujiwara no Nagako, daughter of Fujiwara no Fuhito
  • Prince Asukabe (?–?)
  • Prince Kibumi (?–757)
  • Prince Yamashiro(Fujiwara no Otosada) (?–763)
  • Princess Kyōshō, a nun
  • Abe no Ōtoji
  • Princess Kamo (?–?)
  • Princess Chinu
  • Princess Madokata (?–774)
  • Nagaya's Curse

    It is said that, as Prince Nagaya was forced to die unreasonably, he bore a grudge against the living after his death. The following are believed to have been the victims of Nagaya's curse:

    Muchimaro, Fusasaki, Maro and Umakai, responsible for the prince's death, caught smallpox one after another and eventually all of them died in 737.

  • In 1988, the former site of Nagaya's residence was discovered with many wooden tablets and historic relics on the construction site of a Sogo department store. Sogo did not care and continued construction. Twelve years after the store's completion, Sogo went bankrupt.
  • References

    Prince Nagaya Wikipedia