Nobuko Matsudaira
Nobuko Matsudaira | |
|---|---|
| An older Japanese woman, seated indoors, wearing a kimono, hands clasped in her lap Matsudaira from a 1956 magazine | |
| Born | Nobuko Nabeshima 15 July 1886 |
| Died | 8 May 1969 (aged 82) |
| Other names |
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| Spouse | Tsuneo Matsudaira |
| Children | 3, including Setsuko, Princess Chichibu |
| Parents | |
| Relatives |
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Nobuko Matsudaira (松平信子, 15 July 1886 – 8 May 1969), also known as Madame Matsudaira, was a Japanese socialite. As the wife of a Japanese ambassador based in Washington, D.C. and London, she was well known as a political hostess in the West in the 1920s and 1930s.
Early life
[edit | edit source]Nabeshima was born in 1886, the daughter of politician and college president Nabeshima Naohiro and Nabeshima Nagako, who was president of the Oriental Women's Association (東洋婦人会). She was a member of the powerful Nabeshima family. Nabeshima attended the Gakushuin Women's School, and was later president of the school's alumnae association.
Career
[edit | edit source]Nabeshima was an aide and translator to Empress Teimei,[1] whose son later married Nabeshima's daughter.[2] She lived in Washington, D.C. as a political hostess,[3][4] and traveled with her daughters from 1925 to 1928, while her husband was the Japanese Ambassador to the United States.[5][6][7] She gave a public speech of gratitude in Boston in 1927.[8] Her gowns were described in newspaper accounts of state dinners and other events.[9][10] The family lived in London in 1909 (when daughter Setsuko was born)[11] and from 1929 to 1935,[12] when her husband was the Japanese Ambassador to the Court of St. James.[13][14] She welcomed and promoted an international touring display of Japanese ceremonial dolls.[15][16][17]
Madame Matsudaira wrote poetry.[4] She assisted American writer Elizabeth Gray Vining, who described her as "grey-haired, serene, humorous, and wise."[18] She was mentioned in two of Eleanor Roosevelt's "My Day" columns in May 1953, when Roosevelt was traveling in Japan.[19][20]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]In 1906, Nabeshima married diplomat Tsuneo Matsudaira.[13] Their son was Ichiro Matsudaira. One of their daughters was Setsuko, who became a princess in the Imperial House of Japan.[11][21][22] One of the Matsudairas' grandchildren is Tsunenari Tokugawa, the 18th head of the Tokugawa clan, and one of their great-grandchildren is writer and translator Iehiro Tokugawa, who succeeded his father Tsunenari to the Tokugawa main line headship on 1 January 2023. Her husband died in 1949 and she lived with her widowed daughter after 1953; she eventually expired in 1969 at the age of 82.
References
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Nobu Matsudaira as a sitter in four portraits made in 1922 by Bassano Ltd, in the National Portrait Gallery (UK)
- A newsreel collection that includes a shot of Madame Matsudaira at a fashion event in 1926, at Internet Archive
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