Kiyosu Ienori
| Name | Kiyosu Ienori |
| Title | 19 Jun 1862 - 13 Jul 1923 |
| Gender | Male |
| Birthday | 1862-06-19 |
| nationality | Japan |
| Source | https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q6605534 |
| pptrace | View Family Tree |
| LastUpdate | 2025-11-29T01:01:38.200Z |
Introduction
Kiyosu Family Tutor (June 19, 1862 – July 13, 1923), originally the fifteenth son of Prince Fushimi no Miya Yoshiie, was born in Edo. He was childhood called "Rokujū-gō." In the second year of the Keio era (1866), he was demoted from official status and became the 25th head of the Shinshū Butsugō-ji, Tetsunō Masamichi (hastening name: Shinda), son of Takaifuji Masatomo. In the first year of the Meiji era (1868), he succeeded at Butsugō-ji and became the 26th head. In the fifth year of the Meiji era (1872), he designated the area of Shibuya as a noble domain and changed his family name to Shibuya Family Tutor. In the 13th year of the Meiji era (1880), he was promoted to Daikyō-sei (Grand Master).
On June 28, 1888, he left the Shibuya family and returned to the Fushimi-no-miya family, demoted from court rank, and was granted the peerage of Count, officially taking the name Kiyosu Family Tutor. On the same day, official announcements listed his peerage and rank, confirming his status as a Fourth Rank Court Official and Count.
Subsequently, he served as a Peerage Council member in the House of Peers, an Imperial Court Advisor, and held offices such as Governor of Yamanashi Prefecture (11th), Ibaraki Prefecture (16th), Wakayama Prefecture (12th), and Niigata Prefecture (12th). During his tenure as Governor of Wakayama Prefecture, he approved a bill to establish licensed brothels, earning nicknames such as "Madam House Governor" and "Prostitution Officer."
He died in 1923 at the age of 61. His brothers included Prince Kōkō, Prince Kagen, and Prince Jōnin, among other members of the imperial family.
Family Tree
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