Tadatoshi Miyagawa

Japanese composer

Sakiko Ano
(m. 1964)
Children
  • Yoko Miyagawa
  • Yuko Miyagawa
Parent
  • Hidemaro Konoye (father)
Relatives
  • Atsumaro Konoe (grandfather)
  • Fumimaro Konoe (uncle)
  • Johann Sebastian Paetsch (son-in-law)

Tadatoshi Miyagawa (水谷川忠俊, Miyagawa Tadatoshi, born 9 December 1935)[1] is a Japanese composer, a Gagaku performer and researcher, as well as a music arranger. His former last and first name was Konoe Toshitake (近衛俊健).[1] He is a 13th generation Patrilinear descendant, also known as the male line, of Emperor Go-Yōzei, Emperor of Japan.[2]

Career

He was born in the city of Osaka, Higashi-ku, Kyuhoji as the second son (illegitimate child) to Hidemaro Konoye of the Konoe family.[3] His mother was Fumiko Tsuboi (坪井文子). His father, Hidemaro, registered his birth certificate at the East Ward (Higashiku) city hall in Osaka on 22 July 1937.[4]

On 19 October 1939, he was adopted by the youngest brother of his father Tadamaro Miyagawa (水谷川忠麿) and he was renamed Tadatoshi (忠俊).[1] His youngest memory was being in an atelier of Tadamaro in Sendagaya, Tokyo and has no recollection of his real birth mother.[4] While he was studying at the Gakushūin Elementary School they moved to Nara and he went to the elementary school (co-ed) which is attached to the women University in Nara and he also finished junior high and high school at the same school. Upon graduating high school he moved back to Tokyo and became assistant to Naozumi Yamamoto who is a composer and conductor.

In August 1962, he passed the exam to be a full scholarship student at the Madrid Royal Conservatory of Music in Spain.[5] In 1963, he studied in the Berlin Municipal Conservatory of Music (which is now the Berlin University of the Arts, or UdK). His first daughter, Yoko, was born in Berlin, West Germany. In 1968, he returned to Japan just before his second daughter, Yuko, was born.[6]

His brother Hidetake Konoe is also a composer and conductor. His wife, Sakiko, is the daughter of viscount Suefusa Ano (阿野季房) from the Ano family of Northern Fujiwara clan. Sakiko was a classmate of his from the Gakushūin Elementary School in Tokyo where the children of the Imperial aristocracy (Kuge) were educated.[5] His oldest daughter, Yoko Miyagawa, is a violinist and his second daughter Yuko Miyagawa is a cellist.[7]

Movies

Folk song

Summer Festival them song fr:Matsumoto Bon Bon

TV drama music

  • TBS "Yasubee's Ocean" (1969–1970)
  • Fuji TV "White Terror" (1975)
  • NHK "New Western circumstances (3) Miso soup fanatics go to Europe" (1977)
  • TV Tokyo "The Dangerous Evening that Wives Bought" (1988)

Ancestry

Miyagawa family

The Miyagawa family traces its origins to Takaoki Miyagawa, the son of Tadahiro Konoe, and was listed as a member of the Nara aristocracy.[8]

for further information see: Miyagawa family

Konoe family

The Konoe family was founded by Konoe Motozane, the son of Fujiwara no Tadamichi, and was one of the Five regent houses in Japan.[9] [10] [11]

for further information see: Konoe family

Relationship with the Imperial family

Emperor GoyozeiEmperor Go-MizunooEmpress Meishō
Emperor Go-Kōmyō
Emperor Go-Sai
Emperor ReigenEmperor HigashiyamaEmperor NakamikadoEmperor SakuramachiEmperor MomozonoEmperor Go-Momozono
直仁親王典仁親王Emperor KōkakuEmperor NinkōEmperor KōmeiEmperor MeijiEmperor TaishōHirohitoAkihito
Konoe NobuhiroKonoe HisatsuguKonoe MotohiroKonoe IehiroKonoe IehisaKonoe UchisakiKonoe TsunehiroKonoe MotosakiKonoe TadahiroKonoe TadafusaAtsumaro KonoeFumimaro Konoe
Hidemaro KonoyeHidetake Konoe
Tadatoshi Miyagawa



As a patrilineal descendant of the Konoe family, Miyagawa is a nephew of former Japanese Prime Minister Konoe Fumimaro, and is a first cousin once removed of both the former prime minister Hosokawa Morihiro and his brother Tadateru Konoe. By virtue of his descent from the Konoe family, he is related to the Japanese imperial family, being a descendant of Emperor Go-Yōzei.

Ancestors of Tadatoshi Miyagawa[12][self-published source?]
8. Prince Konoe Tadafusa (1838–1873)
4. Prince Konoe Atsumaro (1863–1904)
9. Shimazu Mitsuko
2. Viscount Konoe Hidemaro (1898–1973)
10. Maeda Yoshiyasu, 14th Lord of Kaga (1830–1874)
5. Maeda Sawako (1871–1945)
11. Hisanori NN
1. Miyagawa Tadatoshi
3. Tsuboi Fumiko (1901–?)

References

  1. ^ a b c Oono Kaoru (大野芳) "Konoe Hidemaro" (近衛秀麿) p.249
  2. ^ "後陽成天皇 (107)" (in Japanese). Imperial Household Agency. n.d. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
  3. ^ Oono (大野)、p.279。
  4. ^ a b Oono Kaoru (大野芳) "Konoe Hidemaro" (近衛秀麿) p.250
  5. ^ a b 大野、p.390。
  6. ^ "German directory for Berlin, 1968". Retrieved 18 June 2024.
  7. ^ "Yuko Miyagawa, cellist". Retrieved 18 June 2024.
  8. ^ "水谷川家". Archived from the original on 9 November 2017. Retrieved 18 June 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ Nihon dai hyakka zensho. Shōgakkan, 小学館. 1989. 五摂家. ISBN 4-09-526001-7. OCLC 14970117.
  10. ^ Sansom, George (1958). A history of Japan to 1334. Stanford University Press. p. 210. ISBN 0804705232.
  11. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Go-sekke" at p. 260.
  12. ^ "Genealogy". Reichsarchiv. May 2010. Retrieved 19 September 2017. (in Japanese)
  • Ohno Yoshi "Konoe Hidemaro - A man who made a Japanese orchestra" Kodansha, 2006. ISBN 4-06-212490-4
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