Princess Chooses Love Over Palace Life

By MARI YAMAGUCHI
The Associated Press
Tuesday, November 15, 2005; 3:32 PM

TOKYO -- The only daughter of Japan's Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko married a childhood friend Tuesday and began life as a commoner after moving out of the royal palace and giving up the title of princess.

Thousands of well-wishers cheered 36-year-old Princess Sayako as she was driven from the palace grounds to the Imperial Hotel, where she married Yoshiki Kuroda, a Tokyo city employee, in a low-key ceremony.


Sayako Kuroda, right, and her husband Yoshiki Kuroda raise glasses of champagne to toast during their wedding banguet at a Tokyo hotel Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2005. Sayako, the daughter of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, gave up her royal status as princess by marrying Kuroda, a Tokyo city employee. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, POOL)
Sayako Kuroda, right, and her husband Yoshiki Kuroda raise glasses of champagne to toast during their wedding banguet at a Tokyo hotel Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2005. Sayako, the daughter of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, gave up her royal status as princess by marrying Kuroda, a Tokyo city employee. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, POOL) (Koji Sasahara - AP)

It was the first time an emperor's daughter had married a commoner, and the wedding was austere by royal standards. Afterward the former princess, now known as Sayako Kuroda, moved to a Tokyo apartment to begin life as a wife and taxpayer.

Unlike her brothers, Sayako had to give up her generous royal allowance under a 1947 law that automatically strips female royals of their title when they are married. To prepare for her new life, Sayako took driving lessons and practiced shopping at supermarkets.

Sayako referred to the radical change in her life in a statement released after the ceremony, in which she said her father had told her their relationship would remain unchanged and urged her to respect her husband and his work.

"The emperor told me to continue to polish the virtues I have gained in my life so far. There are many things I still do not know about my life ahead, so I'm not sure how exactly to follow these instructions," she said.

"But I feel very happy that the emperor regards my new life as a continuation, not as a complete break," Sayako added.

The emperor and empress wished the newlyweds a quiet life together and expressed their gratitude to the public for its support.

"We hope the couple will continue to receive support and begin their new life in peace," the imperial couple said in a statement released after the wedding.

The post-nuptials also were to be low-key, the Imperial Household Agency has said. After the reception, the newlyweds were to dine at the hotel and go straight to their new home.

Palace officials registered the marriage at a government office on their behalf during the wedding, officially making the princess Sayako Kuroda, the agency said.

Sayako and Kuroda were childhood acquaintances, but their romance began two years ago at a tennis party thrown by Prince Akishino, one of Sayako's brothers.


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