Kōshaku (Count)

E895384

Kōshaku (Count) was a noble title in the Japanese kazoku peerage system, roughly equivalent to a European count and granted to high-ranking statesmen, military leaders, and aristocrats during the Meiji era.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Kōshaku 0

Statements (42)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Japanese peerage title
hereditary title
noble title
abolishedBy Japanese Constitution of 1947 NERFINISHED
abolishedIn 1947
associatedWith Imperial Japanese Army leaders NERFINISHED
Imperial Japanese Navy leaders NERFINISHED
Meiji oligarchy NERFINISHED
belongsToSystem kazoku peerage system
coexistedWith Danshaku (Baron) NERFINISHED
Kōshaku (Marquis) NERFINISHED
Kōshaku (Prince)
Shishaku (Viscount) NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Japan
equivalentTo European count
grantedBy Emperor of Japan NERFINISHED
grantedFor distinguished military service
distinguished political service
loyalty to the emperor
service to the state
grantedTo aristocrats
high-ranking statesmen
military leaders
higherRank Kōshaku (Marquis) NERFINISHED
inheritance patrilineal succession
language Japanese
legalStatus abolished
lowerRank Shishaku (Viscount) NERFINISHED
partOf kazoku
rankInKazoku third rank
relativeRankToEuropean count GENERATED
script kanji
socialClass kazoku nobility
statusAfter1947 purely historical title
systemModeledOn European nobility systems
transliteration kōshaku
typeOf peerage rank
usedDuringPeriod Meiji era NERFINISHED
Shōwa era (pre-1947) NERFINISHED
Taishō era NERFINISHED
usedIn Empire of Japan NERFINISHED
writingSystem Japanese

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kuroda Kiyotaka honorificTitle Kōshaku (Count)