The Imperial Household Law of 1947 (皇室典範, Kōshitsu Tenpan) is a Japanese law that governs the line of imperial succession, the membership of the imperial family, and several other matters pertaining to the administration of the Imperial Household.
In 2017, the National Diet changed the law to enable the Emperor Akihito to abdicate within three years.[1][2] With this change, he abdicated on 30 April 2019 and was succeeded by his eldest son, Naruhito on 1 May 2019.[3]
^"Japan enacts law to allow 1st abdication of emperor in 200 years".
^"Japan's Lower Parliament Passes Law Allowing Its Emperor to Abdicate". The Atlantic. 3 June 2017.
^"Panel stresses clean break once emperor steps down". Nikkei Asian Review. 22 April 2017. Archived from the original on 7 May 2019. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
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The ImperialHousehold Agency (宮内庁, Kunai-chō) (IHA) is an agency of the government of Japan in charge of state matters concerning the Imperial Family...
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considered changes to the ImperialHouseholdLaw to allow additional potential successors to the throne. Traditionally, the imperial throne was passed on under...
Council was established in 1947, when the current ImperialHouseholdLaw took effect. The ImperialHouseholdLaw provides that the Council shall be summoned...
the people with whom resides sovereign power". The ImperialHouseholdLaw governs the line of imperial succession. Pursuant to his constitutional role as...
United States forces. Laws relating to the imperial house must be approved by the Diet. Under the old system, the ImperialHouseholdLaw was separate from...
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line of succession to the Chrysanthemum Throne is based on the ImperialHouseholdLaw. At present, only direct male-line males are allowed to ascend the...
she gave up her imperial title and left the Japanese Imperial Family, as required by the Article 12 of the ImperialHouseholdLaw, and received a payment...
potential abdication by the Emperor would require an amendment to the ImperialHouseholdLaw, which has no provisions for such a move. On 8 August 2016, the...
emperor, Naruhito. According to the ImperialHouseholdLaw, the Emperor is "on throne until death". The Abdication Law, however, provides legal basis for...
the Imperial Family of Japan). He has not been a member of the imperial family since the passing of the ImperialHouseholdLaw of 1947. If the law had...
Abe announced that he would drop an earlier proposal to alter the ImperialHouseholdLaw so as to allow women to inherit the throne. The proposal had been...
enough to rule. There is also no provision for abdication in the ImperialHouseholdLaw, the Meiji Constitution, or the current 1947 Constitution of Japan...
their marriage, sparked lively debate in Japan about whether The ImperialHouseholdLaw of 1947 should be changed from that of agnatic primogeniture to...
1904 amendment to the 1889 ImperialHouseholdLaw allowed minor princes (ō) of the imperial family to renounce their imperial status and become peers (in...
abdicate. Abdication by the Emperor required an amendment to the ImperialHouseholdLaw, which had no provisions for such a move. On 8 August 2016, the...
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to the 1889 ImperialHouseholdLaw Matters of constitutional interpretation, proposed laws, and ordinances Proclamations of martial law or declaration...
2005, Princess Nori gave up her imperial title and left the Imperial Family as required by 1947 ImperialHouseholdLaw, took the surname of her husband...
female member born into the Japanese Imperial Family to marry a commoner since the passage of the ImperialHouseholdLaw in 1947, and the first member of...