- Empress Suiko - Wikipedia
Suiko was the younger sister of Emperor Yōmei Empress Suiko was a consort to her half-brother, Emperor Bidatsu, but after Bidatsu's first wife died she became his official consort and was given the title Ōkisaki (official consort of the emperor) She bore eight children
- Suiko | Empress, Japan, Buddhism | Britannica
Suiko (born 554, Yamato, Japan—died April 15, 628, Yamato) was the first reigning empress of Japan in recorded history, the wife of the emperor Bidatsu and the daughter of the emperor Kimmei
- Suiko - Yokai. com
Suiko have the body of a small child and are covered in extremely tough scales like a pangolin’s They have sharp, hook-like growths on their kneecaps which resemble a tiger’s claws They live near riverbanks and in large bodies of water
- Empress Suiko - New World Encyclopedia
Empress Suiko (推古天皇 Suiko Tennō) (554 C E – April 15, 628 C E ) [1] was the thirty-third emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession, and the first known woman to hold this position She ruled for 35 years
- Empress Suiko of Japan: First Japanese Woman Ruler - ThoughtCo
Empress Suiko was the first recorded woman to rule Japan as an empress in her own right She promoted Buddhism in Japan and increased influence from China, shaping Japanese culture and government
- Suiko | Biography | Research Starters - EBSCO
The first female monarch of Japan, Suiko presided over reforms of the bureaucracy and the first known attempts to compile a history of Japan Her reign saw the compilation of a blueprint for a far-reaching modernization process, the Seventeen Article Constitution
- Suiko (554–628) - Encyclopedia. com
Japanese empress, the first woman sovereign of Japan, who established Buddhism as the religion of Japanese rulers and initiated steps to centralize the state under imperial rule Name variations: Suikotenno Pronunciation: Sue-e-koe
- The Story of Empress Suiko
At Toyurano-miya Palace in the year 592, the 39-year-old Princess Nukatabe was crowned Empress Suiko She thereby became the first woman in the history of Japan—and East Asia—to be enthroned as an empress
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