Nagahisa file photo [18179]

Nagahisa

Given NameNagahisa
HouseImperial House of Japan
Born19 Feb 1910
Died4 Sep 1940
CountryJapan
CategoryMilitary-Ground
GenderMale

Contributor:

ww2dbasePrince Nagahisa was born to Prince Naruhisa, head of the Kitashirakawa branch of the Japanese Imperial family, and Fusako, the Princess Kane. In 1923, when his father passed away in France in 1923, he became the head of Kitashirakawa. In 1931, he graduated from the Japanese Army Academy and became a junior artillery officer. In 1935, he married Sachiko Tokugawa, the daughter of Baron Yoshikuni Tokugawa; they would have one son and one daughter. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in 1936. Upon graduating from the Army Staff College in 1939, he was promoted to the rank of captain; later in the same year, he was assigned to Japanese Army's North China Area Army. Prince Nagahisa of Kitashirakawa died in an airplane crash in Sep 1940 at Zhangjiakou in Japanese puppet state of Mengjiang in northern China, becoming the first member of the Japanese Imperial family to be killed in WW2. He was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum posthumously along with a promotion to the rank of major.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia

Last Major Revision: May 2013

Nagahisa 互動地圖

Photographs

Portrait of Prince Nagahisa, late 1920sWedding photo of Prince Nagahisa and Sachiko Tokugawa, 26 Apr 1935Japanese Princes Takamatsu, Mikasa, Asaka, Takahiko of Asaka, and Kitashirakawa and Korean Princes Yi Un, Yi Geon, and Yi U at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, Japan, Oct 1938

Nagahisa Timeline

1910年2月19日 Prince Nagahisa was born.
1931年10月26日 Prince Nagahisa was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Paulownia Flowers.
1935年4月25日 Prince Nagahisa married Sachiko Tokugawa.
1937年5月2日 Prince Nagahisa's son Prince Michihisa was born.
1939年11月13日 Prince Nagahisa's daughter Princess Hatsuko was born.
1940年9月4日 Prince Nagahisa passed away in an airplane crash at Kalgan (now Zhangjiakou) in Japanese puppet state of Mengjiang in northern China.
1941年9月5日 A song in mourning of Prince Nagahisa was released in Japan. The music was composed by Yuji Koseki, the lyrics were written by Count Yoshinori Futara, and it was performed by popular singer Akiko Futaba and veteran Takeo Ito.
1959年10月4日 Prince Nagahisa was enshrined at the Yosukuni Shrine in Tokyo, Japan.




請考慮透過 Patreon 支持本站。任何數量都會有莫大幫助!感謝您的支持。

請幫助宣傳:

 Reddit
 Bluesky
 Mastodon

​訂閱 WW2DB,掌握最新動態:

 RSS Feeds




Posting Your Comments on this Topic

Your Name 
Your Webite 
Your Email 
 Your email will not be published
Comment Type 
Your Comments 
 

Notes:

1. We hope that visitor conversations at WW2DB will be constructive and thought-provoking. Please refrain from using strong language. HTML tags are not allowed. Your IP address will be tracked even if you remain anonymous. WW2DB site administrators reserve the right to moderate, censor, and/or remove any comment. All comment submissions will become the property of WW2DB.

2. For inquiries about military records for members of the World War II armed forces, please see our FAQ.

查詢 WW2DB


Nagahisa Photo Gallery
Portrait of Prince Nagahisa, late 1920s
See all 3 photographs of Nagahisa


著名二戰名言
"We no longer demand anything, we want war."

Joachim von Ribbentrop, German Foreign Minister, Aug 1939


支持本站

請考慮透過Patreon 支持本站。 任何數量都會有莫大幫助。 謝謝!

或者,請透過 TeeSpring 購買 WW2DB 周邊商品來支持我們,謝謝!