Nijō Kanemoto (二条 兼基, 1268–1334), son of regent Nijō Yoshizane and adopted son of Nijō Morotada, was a Japanese kugyō (court noble) of the Kamakura period (1185–1333) of Japan. He held regent positions sesshō in 1298 and kampaku from 1300 to 1305. Regent Nijō Michihira was his son born by a concubine. His wife was a daughter of regent Kujō Tadanori; she gave birth to a son who was adopted by the Imakōji family and became known as Imakōji Yoshifuyu, and a daughter who later married Kujō Fusazane.
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Kamakura period |
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Nanboku-chō period |
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Meiji period | |||||
1: official court titles for samurai (buke-kan'i). |
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Nijō Kanemoto (二条 兼基, 1268–1334), son of regent Nijō Yoshizane and adopted son of Nijō Morotada, was a Japanese kugyō (court noble) of the Kamakura period (1185–1333) of Japan. He held regent positions sesshō in 1298 and kampaku from 1300 to 1305. Regent Nijō Michihira was his son born by a concubine. His wife was a daughter of regent Kujō Tadanori; she gave birth to a son who was adopted by the Imakōji family and became known as Imakōji Yoshifuyu, and a daughter who later married Kujō Fusazane.
Asuka period | |
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Heian period |
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Kamakura period | |
Muromachi period | |
Edo period | |
Taishō era |
Heian period |
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Kamakura period |
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Nanboku-chō period |
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Muromachi period | |||||
Sengoku period | |||||
Azuchi–Momoyama period | |||||
Edo period |
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Hakuhō period | |||||
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Nara period | |||||
Heian period |
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Kamakura period |
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Nanboku-chō period |
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Muromachi period | |||||
Sengoku period | |||||
Azuchi–Momoyama period | |||||
Edo period | |||||
Meiji period | |||||
1: official court titles for samurai (buke-kan'i). |
![]() | This biography of a Japanese noble is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |