Tokyo, Japan - November 26, 2024 Members of the general public head to offer prayers at Princess Yuriko's main funeral ceremony, called "Renso-no-Gi," at the Toshimagaoka Cemetery in Tokyo on Nov. 26, ...
After living through the tumultuous Showa period (1926-1989), the entire Heisei (1989-2019) and into the current Reiwa era, ...
Japan on Tuesday held a funeral for the imperial family’s oldest member Princess Yuriko, who died at the age of 101. The ...
Tokyo, Japan - 15, 2024 A car carrying the body of Japanese Princess Yuriko arrives at Akasaka Estate in Tokyo on Nov. 15, ...
Her death reduces Japan’s rapidly dwindling imperial family to 16 people, and only 4 men, as the country faces questions ...
A hearse carrying Princess Yuriko's casket arrives at the Toshimagaoka ... in a grave at the cemetery. A member of Japan's former nobility, she married Prince Mikasa, the youngest brother of ...
Japanese Princess Yuriko, the oldest member of Japan's imperial family, passed away at 101. She died due to old age, possibly ...
Per the Japan Times, "Princess Yuriko was the longest-living member of the imperial family since the Meiji Era (1868-1912) ...
The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP Princess Yuriko of Japan, who was the oldest member of the Japanese Imperial Family, has died at 101 years old. Princess Yuriko — the wife of Emperor Hirohito’s ...
Princess Yuriko became the sister-in-law of Japan's World War II-era Emperor Hirohito when she married his brother Prince ...
Fairfax Media Archives//Getty Images Prince Mikasa and Princess Yuriko of Japan in 1971. Princess Yuriko, born Yuriko Takagi in 1923 to a noble family in Tokyo, married Prince Mikasa, the younger ...