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Kiko, Crown Princess of Japan
Member of the Japanese imperial family (born 1966)
Member of the Japanese imperial family (born 1966)
| Field | Value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Kiko | ||||
| {{native name | ja | 紀子 | italics | no | paren=omit}} |
| title | Crown Princess Akishino | ||||
| image | Kiko, Crown Princess Akishino (54751644693, cropped).jpg | ||||
| caption | Kiko in 2025 | ||||
| birth_name | Kiko Kawashima | ||||
| birth_date | |||||
| birth_place | Suruga-ku, Shizuoka, Japan | ||||
| spouse | |||||
| issue | {{plain list | ||||
| house | Imperial House of Japan (by marriage) | ||||
| father | Tatsuhiko Kawashima | ||||
| mother | Kazuyo Sugimoto |
| ja
- Mako Komuro
- Princess Kako of Akishino
- Prince Hisahito of Akishino Kiko, Crown Princess Akishino (born Kiko Kawashima; 11 September 1966) is a member of the Imperial House of Japan. She is married to Crown Prince Fumihito, the heir presumptive to the Japanese throne.
Kiko earned a doctoral degree in humanities from Ochanomizu University. Her marriage to Crown Prince Fumihito in 1990 reflected a trend in which members of the imperial family married academically accomplished commoners from the middle class, continuing a pattern observed in previous and current generations. The couple has three children: Princess Mako, Princess Kako, and Prince Hisahito.
Prior to their investiture as Crown Prince and Crown Princess, the ongoing Japanese imperial succession debate had prompted discussions among some lawmakers about revising the male-only succession rule (agnatic primogeniture) established by the Allies of World War II in the postwar constitution of Japan. The birth of Prince Hisahito in September 2006, however, secured the line of succession for male heirs, placing him immediately after his father. Hisahito's cousin, Princess Aiko, the only child of Emperor Naruhito, remains legally ineligible to inherit the throne, though debate continues over the potential for future empresses regnant.
As active working members of the imperial family, Kiko and Crown Prince Fumihito regularly participate in official duties, including attendance at summits, organizational meetings, and international events. They frequently represent the Imperial Household at ceremonies involving heads of state and other dignitaries abroad. Kiko’s patronages focus primarily on medical, scientific, and children’s welfare initiatives.
Early life
Kiko was born at Shizuoka Saiseikai General Hospital in Suruga-ku, Shizuoka, Japan. She is the eldest daughter of Tatsuhiko Kawashima (1940–2021) and his wife, Kazuyo Sugimoto (born 1942). The family moved to Philadelphia in 1967 while her father attended the University of Pennsylvania. He earned a doctorate at the University of Pennsylvania in 1971 in regional science and later taught there.
Kiko attended elementary and high school in Vienna, Austria, when her father became the chief researcher at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxenburg, Austria, where he studied spatial science and NGO activities. The future princess became fluent in English and German. She lived with her parents and younger brother in a small on-campus apartment in Tokyo. She graduated from the Department of Psychology in the Faculty of Letters of Gakushuin University with a Bachelor of Letters degree in psychology in 1989 and received a Master of Humanities degree in social psychology from the Graduate School of Gakushuin University in 1995. She received a Doctor of Philosophy degree in humanities from Ochanomizu University.
She participated in the Ship for Southeast Asian and Japanese Youth Program (SSEAYP) in 1987 and continues to be a supporter of the program.
Marriage
Prince Fumihito first proposed marriage to Kiko Kawashima on 26 June 1986 while they were both undergraduates at Gakushuin. Three years later, the Imperial Household Council announced the engagement on 12 September 1989 and the engagement ceremony was held on 12 January 1990. No marriage date would be set until the official one-year mourning period ended for Fumihito's grandfather, Emperor Hirohito, who had died in January 1989.
The wedding took place at an exclusive shrine at Tokyo Imperial Palace on 29 June 1990. The Imperial Household Council had previously granted the prince permission to establish a new branch of the imperial family and the Emperor granted him the title Akishino-no-miya (Prince Akishino) on his wedding day. Upon marriage, his bride became Her Imperial Highness The Princess Akishino, known informally as Princess Kiko. As tradition dictates, upon her entry into the imperial family and like other members, she received a personal emblem (o-shirushi): the blossom of the bristle-pointed beachhead iris Iris setosa (hiougi-ayame, cypress fan iris) which blooms in intense shades of dark lavender to blue.
The engagement and marriage of Prince Akishino to the former Kiko Kawashima broke precedent in several respects. At the time, the groom was still a graduate student at Gakushuin and he would be married before his older brother, Crown Prince Naruhito. Officials at the Imperial Household Agency were opposed to the marriage, and so was Fumihito's paternal grandmother Empress Nagako. As the second woman from a middle-class and academician background to marry into the imperial family after her mother-in-law Empress Michiko, she was given the nickname "the apartment princess" by the media. Although Empress Michiko was also born a commoner, she was from a very wealthy family; her father was the president of a large flour-milling company.
The Princess had said repeatedly that she wanted to finish her master's degree if circumstances permitted. She completed her post-graduate studies in psychology between her official duties and received her master's degree in psychology in 1995. She is known for her continuing interest in deaf culture and the Deaf in Japan. She learned Japanese sign language and is a skilled sign language interpreter. She attends the "Sign Language Speech Contest for High School Students" held every August, and "Praising Mothers Raising Children with Hearing Impairments" every December. In October 2008, she participated in the "38th National Deaf Women's Conference."
In March 2013, Kiko was granted a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Psychology at the Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences, Ochanomizu University, for her dissertation entitled "Knowledge, perceptions, beliefs and behaviors related to tuberculosis: A study based on questionnaire surveys with seminar participants of the National Federation of Community Women's Organizations for TB Control and female college students."
Children

Since 1997, Prince Fumihito and Princess Kiko and their children have maintained a principal residence on the grounds of the Akasaka Estate in Motoakasaka, Minato, Tokyo. The couple have three children (two daughters and one son):
- Mako Komuro; formerly Princess Mako; following her civil marriage to lawyer Kei Komuro on 26 October 2021, Mako gave up her imperial title and left the imperial family as required by 1947 Imperial Household Law.
- Princess Kako of Akishino
- Prince Hisahito of Akishino
Official duties
The Prince and Princess are called upon to meet with important overseas visitors to improve diplomatic relations. The Princess was chosen as one of the Young Global Leaders for 2007, drawn from a poll of 4000 candidates.
The Prince and Princess have made numerous official visits to foreign countries. In June 2002, they became the first members of the imperial family to visit Mongolia, in celebration of the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations. In October 2002, they visited the Netherlands to attend the funeral of Prince Claus of the Netherlands. In September 2003, the Prince and Princess made goodwill visits to Fiji, Tonga and Samoa, again, the first time ever members of the imperial family had visited these countries. In March 2004, the Prince and Princess returned to the Netherlands for the funeral of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands. In January 2008, they visited Indonesia for a ceremony commemorating the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Japan and Indonesia.
.jpg)
They visited Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania in May 2009 on the occasion of "Japan-Danube Friendship Year 2009" and the Netherlands in August 2009 for the commemorative event of the 400th anniversary of the trade relations between Japan and the Netherlands. They have visited Costa Rica, Uganda, Croatia, the Slovakia, Slovenia, Peru, and Argentina. From June to July 2014, Prince Fumihito and Princess Kiko visited Zambia and Tanzania.
.jpg)
In June–July 2019, the couple carried out the first official overseas visit by the imperial family following the accession of Emperor Naruhito. They visited Poland and Finland to participate in the celebrations for the 100th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relationship between Japan and the two countries. In August 2019, the couple and their son, Hisahito, arrived in Bhutan for a visit. In 2023 they were guests at the coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla.
Health
While pregnant with her third child, Kiko was diagnosed with placenta praevia. The Princess also had carpal tunnel syndrome osteoporosis aggravated by child-nursing, a symptom common among middle-aged women, her doctor revealed on 14 December 2007.
In late 2023 it was reported that Kiko was suffering from a gastrointestinal illness which prevented her from eating "normal meals" though an endoscopy performed on her in January 2024 found no abnormalities.
Honours
National
- Japan:
- [[File:JPN Hokan-sho 1Class BAR.svg|70px]] Grand Cordon (Paulownia) of the Order of the Precious Crown
- [[File:Red Cross Order of Merit (Japan).svg|70px]] Dame of the Decoration of the Red Cross
- [[File:Red Cross Order of Merit (Japan).svg|70px]] Recipient of the Red Cross Medal
Foreign
- Belgium:
- [[File:BEL Kroonorde Grootkruis BAR.svg|70px]] Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown (11 October 2016)
- Netherlands:
- [[File:NED Kroonorde A1 BAR.png|70px]] Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown (24 October 2014)
- Peru:
- [[File:PER Order of the Sun of Peru - Grand Cross BAR.png|70px]] Grand Cross of the Order of the Sun (27 January 2014)
- Spain:
- [[File:ESP Isabella Catholic Order GC.svg|70px]] Dame Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (8 November 2008)
Honorary positions
- Reserve Member of the Imperial House Council
- Patroness of the Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association
- President of the Imperial Gift Foundation Boshi-Aiiku-kai
- Honorary Patroness of the Society for the Protection of the Cultural Heritage of Daishoji Imperial Convent
- Honorary Vice-president of the Japanese Red Cross Society
- Honorary Research Fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
- Honorary Research Fellow of the Ochanomizu University Institute for Education and Human Development
References
References
- [http://www.kunaicho.go.jp/e-about/history/history03.html Their Imperial Highnesses Crown Prince and Crown Princess Akishino and their family - names] {{Webarchive. link. (7 July 2007 – official website of the Imperial Household Agency)
- "Japan Crown Prince Fumihito formally declared 1st in line to throne". Kyodo News.
- "Japanese Royal Bride's Years At Penn: A 'Vivacious' Child". philly.com.
- (26 June 1990). "Tokyo Journal; She's Shy and Not So Shy, Japan's Princess Bride". The New York Times.
- In 1972, they moved back to Japan, where her father taught economics at [[Gakushuin University]] in Tokyo.[https://www.chicagotribune.com/1989/09/13/japanese-prince-plans-to-marry-a-commoner/ "Japanese Prince Plans To Marry A Commoner"]. ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''. 13 September 1989.
- [http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20118247,00.html "Scenes from An Uncommon Marriage: Japan's Prince Aya Weds a Cinderella Psych Major, Kiko Kawashima"]. ''People''. June 1990.
- "Iris setosa (Bristle-Pointed Iris)".
- Valpy, Michael. [https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/the-emperor-and-the-tennis-pro/article4277884/?page=all "The emperor and the tennis pro,"] ''Globe and Mail'' (Canada). June 27, 2009; [http://s02.megalodon.jp/2009-0829-2305-44/news.tbs.co.jp/newseye/tbs_newseye4221919.html 紀子さま、高校生手話コンテストで挨拶] 2009年8月29日, TBS
- She also signs in informal Deaf gatherings.[https://deafjapan.blogspot.com/2010/09/princess-kiko-chats-with-deaf-soccer.html "Princess Kiko chats with Deaf soccer players in sign language after film show,"] {{Webarchive. link. (8 July 2011 ''Deaf Japan News.'' September 7, 2010.)
- "Activities of Their Imperial Highnesses Prince and Princess Akishino and their family". kunaicho.go.jp.
- [https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/5337374.stm "Japan royal baby named Hisahito,"] [[BBC News]]. September 12, 2006.
- "Globis Management Bank President Etsuko Okajima Selected as Young Global Leader 2007 by World Economic Forum". Globis.
- "Their Imperial Highnesses Prince and Princess Akishino to Visit Mongolia". Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
- (10 June 2000). "Prince, Princess to visit Mongolia". The Japan Times.
- "List of Overseas Visits by the Emperor, Empress and Imperial Family (1999–2008)". kunaicho.go.jp.
- "Japan-Fiji Relations". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
- "Japanese Royal visit to Samoa". Embassy of Japan in New Zealand.
- "Prince Akishino to visit Paraguay on Wednesday". AAJ News.
- "Indonesian president meets Japanese Prince Akishino". China View.
- "Prince and princess Akishino on official visit to Bulgaria". bulgarian.ibox.bg.
- "Political relations". Embassy of Romania to Japan.
- "Dutch appeal to visiting Prince Akishino". typepad.com.
- (28 January 2011). "Japanese royals visit Costa Rica". The Tico Times.
- "Japan royals visit Uganda". New Vision.
- "Japanese prince and princess Akishino to visit Croatia". dubrovnik.com.
- "Japan-Slovakia Relations". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
- "Japanese Prince and Princes Akishino to Visit Slovenia". Slovenian Times.
- "Prince Akishino and Princess Kiko of Japan visit Peru". Peru this week.
- "Prince, Princess Akishino in Argentina". News on Japan.
- "Their Imperial Highnesses Prince and Princess Akishino's visit to Zambia". Embassy of Japan in the Republic of Zambia.
- "Prince Akishino of Japan visits Serengeti and Ngorongoro over the weekend". The official website of Tanzania National Parks.
- (27 June 2019). "Japan's Crown Prince Akishino and Crown Princess Kiko leave for European trip". The Japan Times.
- (20 August 2019). "Japan's Crown Prince Akishino and family meet Bhutan's king". The Japan Times.
- (6 May 2023). "Japan's Crown Prince Akishino and Crown Princess Kiko Arrive at Kings Charles's Coronation". Town and Country Magazine.
- "Press Conference on the Occasion of the Birthday of His Imperial Highness Prince Akishino (2006)". The Imperial Household Agency.
- "紀子さま、左腕に痛み - Msn産経ニュース".
- (11 January 2024). "Crown Princess Kiko undergoes endoscopy; no abnormalities found". Japan Today.
- "New Year Greeting".
- "Photographic image".
- "Kiko wearing Red Cross Medals".
- "Photographic image".
- "Belga Image".
- [http://www.koninklijkhuis.nl/nieuws/nieuwsberichten/2014/oktober/decoraties-staatsbezoeken-japan-en-republiek-korea/ Decoraties Staatsbezoeken Japan en Republiek Korea] {{webarchive. link. (4 November 2014 – website of the Dutch Royal House)
- "Photographic image".
- "Photographic image".
- "BOE-A-2008-18121 Real Decreto 1874/2008, de 8 de noviembre, por el que se concede la Gran Cruz de la Orden de Isabel la Católica a Su Alteza Imperial la Princesa Kiko Akishino de Japón.".
- "Archived copy".
- "Photographic image".
- "Their Imperial Highnesses Crown Prince and Crown Princess Akishino and their family". The Imperial Household Agency.
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