Takatsukasa Fusasuke
Encyclopedia
, son of Norihira
Takatsukasa Norihira
, son of Nobuhisa, was a kugyo or Japanese court noble of the early Edo period . He did not hold regent positions kampaku and sessho. Fusasuke was his son. His other son Kujō Kaneharu was adopted by the Kujō family.-References:...

, was a Kugyō
Kugyo
is the collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras. The kugyō was broadly divided into two groups: the , comprising the Chancellor of the Realm, the Minister of the Left, and the Minister of the Right; and the , comprising the...

or Japanese court noble of the early Edo period
Edo period
The , or , is a division of Japanese history which was ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family, running from 1603 to 1868. The political entity of this period was the Tokugawa shogunate....

 (1603–1868). He held regent positions sesshō
Sessho and Kampaku
In Japan, was a title given to a regent who was named to assist either a child emperor before his coming of age, or an empress. The was theoretically a sort of chief advisor for the emperor, but was the title of both first secretary and regent who assists an adult emperor. During the Heian era,...

 (from 1664 to 1668) and kampaku
Sessho and Kampaku
In Japan, was a title given to a regent who was named to assist either a child emperor before his coming of age, or an empress. The was theoretically a sort of chief advisor for the emperor, but was the title of both first secretary and regent who assists an adult emperor. During the Heian era,...

 (from 1668 to 1682). Kanehiro
Takatsukasa Kanehiro
, son of Fusasuke, was a kugyō or Japanese court noble of the Edo period . He held a regent position kampaku from 1703 to 1707. Fusahiro was his adopted son who he had with a daughter of the first head of the Takamatsu Domain Matsudaira Yorishige....

 and Sukenobu
Takatsukasa Sukenobu
, son of regent Fusasuke, was a kugyo or Japanese court noble of the Edo period . While he did not hold any court positions, he had at least two daughters; one , adopted by shogun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, married a head of Mito-Tokugawa Tokugawa Yoshizane, and the other married the fifth head of the...

 were his sons who he had with a daughter of the second head of the Chōshū Domain Mōri Hidenari
Mori Hidenari
was a Japanese daimyo of the early Edo Period, who ruled the Chōshū Domain.-References:...

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