Morisada Matsudaira
Morisada Matsudaira (松平 保定 Matsudaira Morisada, 1926–2011) was a Japanese businessman who was active in historical preservation. The grandson of Matsudaira Katamori, he spent a fair amount of time in Aizu. Morisada was approached by the Imperial Household Agency in the late 1980s, with a request to serve as an official at the mourning ceremony for Emperor Hirohito; simultaneously, they expressed a desire to install him as chief priest of Yasukuni Shrine. Morisada declined the Yasukuni appointment, as the shrine was built to enshrine the soldiers of the Imperial Japanese Army who died in the Boshin War and exclude those who fought against them, including men of the Aizu, Sendai, Nihonmatsu, and Morioka domains.[1]
Morisada had one son, Morihisa Matsudaira.[2]
Notes
- ↑ (Japanese) 財界21 福島の経済情報誌「財界ふくしま」
- ↑ Kobiyama Rokurō, Matsudaira Katamori no Shōgai: Shashinshu. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Ōraisha, 2003, p. 189
Preceded by Morio Matsudaira |
Aizu-Matsudaira family head 1944–2011 |
Succeeded by Morihisa Matsudaira |