Tachibana no Kachiko 橘嘉智子 | |
---|---|
Empress consort of Japan | |
Tenure | August 21, 815 – June 5, 823 |
Empress dowager of Japan | |
Tenure | April 23, 823 – March 2, 833 |
Grand empress dowager of Japan | |
Tenure | March 26, 833 – June 17, 850 |
Born | 786 |
Died | June 17, 850 Heian Kyō (Kyōto) | (aged 63–64)
Spouse | Emperor Saga |
Issue | Emperor Ninmyō Princess Seishi Princess Hideko Prince Hidera Princess Toshiko Princess Yoshiko Princess Shigeko |
House | Tachibana (by birth) Imperial House of Japan (by marriage) |
Father | Tachibana no Kiyotomo |
Mother | Taguchi Michihime |
Tachibana no Kachiko (橘 嘉智子, 786 – June 17, 850), also known as Empress Danrin (檀林皇后, Danrin-kōgō), was a Japanese empress, the chief consort of Emperor Saga[1] and the daughter of Tachibana no Kiyotomo (橘 清友).[2] She was de facto ruler of the empire between 833 and 850.
The empress was a devout Buddhist. She founded the Buddhist Danrin-ji temple complex, and for this reason, she came to be called Danrin-kōgō.[2]
She died in the 4th day of the 5th month of 850.[3] Known for her renowned beauty in her life, on her deathbed, Empress Danrin requested her body to be left open to the environment for the public to see the effects of human decomposition. This event later became a popular Japanese folk legend and was later depicted by the 18th century painting "Nine Stages of Decomposition of the Heian Period Empress Danrin".[4]