Princess Kako of Japan looks effortlessly chic in a pale yellow kimono as she is greeted by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on third day of state visit

Princess Kako of Japan appeared in great spirits as she stepped out on the third day of her state visit to Athens on Tuesday. 

The niece of Emperor Naruhito, 29, arrived in Athens on Sunday, was greeted by Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and his wife Mareva Grabowski at at the Maximos Palace, in Athens.

Princess Kako is currently undergoing an official visit to celebrate diplomatic ties between the two countries and to honour the 2024 Japan-Greece Year of Culture and Tourism, aiming to bring the people of Japan and Greece closer together through travel.

The second daughter of Crown Prince Akishino and Crown Princess Kiko looked effortlessly chic in a pale yellow kimono as she carried out her royal duties. 

During a meeting at the Presidential Palace, the princess also met with Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou.

Princess Kako of Japan appeared in great spirits as she stepped out on the third day of her state visit to Athens on Tuesday

The pair chatted during a formal meeting before taking a walk around the palaces gardens. 

Kako styled her dark locks into a sleek low bun for the occasion and opted for a neutral makeup look.

Yesterday, the royal delivered a speech to mark the 125th anniversary of Japan-Greece diplomatic relations at the Greek National Gallery, in Athens.

The gallery is home to over 20,000 artworks, including paintings and sculptures, according to its website.

Elsewhere on her trip, Kako also paid a visit to the Acropolis to view the architecture of the ancient citadel.

Kako’s visit to Greece comes amid a troubling time for Japan’s royal family as the oldest continuous hereditary monarchy, is facing a succession crisis – because women still aren’t allowed to take to the throne.

Emperor Naruhito, 64, has just one daughter by his wife Empress Masako, Princess Aiko, who was born in 2001 after the royal couple underwent fertility treatment.

Female births have far outweighed male births in recent generations of the Japanese royal family and the dynasty currently has three male heirs.

The niece of Emperor Naruhito, 29, arrived in Athens on Sunday, was greeted by Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (left) and his wife Mareva Grabowski (right) at at the Maximos Palace, in Athens

The niece of Emperor Naruhito, 29, arrived in Athens on Sunday, was greeted by Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (left) and his wife Mareva Grabowski (right) at at the Maximos Palace, in Athens

Princess Kako is currently undergoing an official visit to celebrate diplomatic ties between the two countries and to honour the 2024 Japan-Greece Year of Culture and Tourism

Princess Kako is currently undergoing an official visit to celebrate diplomatic ties between the two countries and to honour the 2024 Japan-Greece Year of Culture and Tourism

The second daughter of Crown Prince Akishino and Crown Princess Kiko looked effortlessly chic in a pale yellow kimono as she carried out her royal duties

The second daughter of Crown Prince Akishino and Crown Princess Kiko looked effortlessly chic in a pale yellow kimono as she carried out her royal duties

The Greek Prime Minister posed for a slew of snaps with Princess Kako inside the palace on Tuesday

The Greek Prime Minister posed for a slew of snaps with Princess Kako inside the palace on Tuesday 

During a meeting at the Presidential Palace, the princess also met with Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou (right)

During a meeting at the Presidential Palace, the princess also met with Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou (right) 

There’s Fumihito, Crown Prince Akishino, 58, who is the Emperor’s brother, Prince Hisahito – Fumihito’s 17-year-old son, and third-in-line Prince Hitachi, who is 88 and the brother of former Emperor Emeritus.

It’s been five years since Naruhito ascended to the Chrysanthemum Throne on May 1st 2019 following the historic abdication of his father Emperor Akihito at the age of 87.

The question of who’s up next continues to perplex both the royal family and the country’s political parties, which last week began discussing revamping the succession rules.

Being a young woman in the country’s Imperial House isn’t an entirely enviable role; A Japanese princess can currently never by Empress and must lose her royal title if she chooses to wed a commoner.

Her children with said commoner would also never form part of the Imperial House.

Katerina Sakellaropoulou (right) and Princess Kako (left) chatted during a formal meeting before taking a walk around the palaces gardens

Katerina Sakellaropoulou (right) and Princess Kako (left) chatted during a formal meeting before taking a walk around the palaces gardens

Kyriakos Mitsotakis (right) and his wife Mareva Grabowski (left) spoke to Kako during their meeting at the Maximos Palace

Kyriakos Mitsotakis (right) and his wife Mareva Grabowski (left) spoke to Kako during their meeting at the Maximos Palace

Kako styled her dark locks into a sleek low bun for the occasion and opted for a neutral makeup look

Kako styled her dark locks into a sleek low bun for the occasion and opted for a neutral makeup look

Emperor Naruhito’s daughter Aiko, now 22, already lives a life moulded by the dynasty she’s part of – surrounded by intense levels of security and unable to have political views or vote.

The young royal lives with her parents at The Imperial Palace in Edo Castle in Tokyo and works as a newsletter editor for the Japanese Red Cross Society, a role she combines with her royal engagements.

For now wedded to a life of public duty, Aiko, might yet look to the path her first cousin, Princess Mako, has taken; the former royal enjoys an upper-class quiet life in New York.

In 2017, Crown Prince Fumihito’s eldest daughter, 32, sent shockwaves through the country when she announced she was giving up her royal title to marry Kei Komuro, her long-term boyfriend.

Mako and Komuro met at Tokyo’s International Christian University in 2013 and became engaged in secret, before announcing their intention to marry in September 2017, which sparked huge scrutiny.

A furore erupted a few months after the news they were to wed broke, with tabloids reporting a financial dispute between Kei Komuro’s mother and her former fiance, with the man claiming mother and son had failed to repay a debt of about $35,000.

Komuro later said the money had been a gift, not a loan. But in 2021, he submitted a 24-page explanation and later reportedly said he would pay a settlement.

Princess Kako delivered a speech at the National Gallery in Athens to mark the 125th anniversary of the establishment of Japan-Greece diplomatic relations

Princess Kako delivered a speech at the National Gallery in Athens to mark the 125th anniversary of the establishment of Japan-Greece diplomatic relations

Princess Kako of Akishino was later snapped leaving The National Gallery of Greece after giving the speech

Princess Kako of Akishino was later snapped leaving The National Gallery of Greece after giving the speech 

After delivering the speech at the National Gallery, Princess Kako went on to greet members of the audience

After delivering the speech at the National Gallery, Princess Kako went on to greet members of the audience

Greece's Minister for Culture, Lisa Mendoni, accompanied Kako out of the hall after she gave her speech

Greece’s Minister for Culture, Lisa Mendoni, accompanied Kako out of the hall after she gave her speech  

Their subsequent wedding in October 2021 was distinctly low-key.

Who is Princess Kako of Japan? 

Princess Kako is a grandchild of Japan’s former Emperor Akihito and the younger daughter of Prince Akishino and Princess Kiko.

Her father and younger brother Prince Hisahito, 12, became the first and second in line to the throne, respectively, when the Emperor, 85, abdicated.

Her uncle Emperor Naruhito now sits on the Chrysanthemum Throne.

Princess Kako’s full title is Her Imperial Highness Princess Kako of Akishino, and she’s declared her wish to support her uncle rather than continuing her education or taking up a career.

When her uncle became Emperor, her father Prince Akishino became Crown Prince, and her brother became second in line to the throne even though he is younger.

The royal family will not consider the idea of an Empress being the sole ruler.

It was met with protests, held behind closed doors without any of the pomp and pageantry of other Japanese royal weddings, which traditionally include a reception, banquet, and a parade through the streets of Tokyo.

Mako was simply dressed in a blue dress and carried a bunch of white flowers, and the nuptials took placeat a registry office, away from cameras and the public.

Reading out a prepared statement, Mako defended her decision to marry, describing Kei as ‘irreplaceable’ and saying ‘our marriage is a necessary step for us to be able to protect our hearts.’

Mako also surrendered a £1million payment she was entitled to according to Japanese tradition, becoming the first imperial family member since World War II to not receive the payment.

Now living simply as Mako Komuro, the former Princess lives in a luxurious but modest – at least according to the proportions of the Imperial Palace – apartment in the Big Apple, with the pair regularly pictured on shopping trips together in the city.

Current Imperial Household Law, established in 1947, states that only a male descendant of a male emperor can succeed to the throne.

Japan has had eight female monarchs between the sixth and 18th centuries, however none came through a female line of descent.

One option for reform would be allowing women to keep their imperial status after marrying, regardless of their husbands’ status, so that any future sons could join the line of succession.

This is opposed by traditionalists who argue that legitimate succession can only pass through the male line.

Another possibility to be raised by the panel relates to former aristocratic families, whose imperial status was abolished during the U.S. Occupation of Japan following the empire’s defeat in the Second World War.

The proposal suggests that scions of these families could be adopted into the emperor’s family.

The Japanese imperial family is considered to be the world’s oldest monarchy, with an unbroken line of male succession that can be traced back two millennia.

Mythology, recognised by the Imperial House, has the legendary Emperor Jimmu, said to be a descendant of a sun goddess and a storm god, as the first of 126 Japanese emperors leading up to the current Emperor Naruhito.

Only male heirs descended from a male emperor are eligible to become Emperor. The family currently has three male heirs: Crown Prince Akishino, who is the current Emperor's brother, Prince Hisahito - Akishino's 17-year-old son, and third-in-line Prince Hitachi, who is 88

Only male heirs descended from a male emperor are eligible to become Emperor. The family currently has three male heirs: Crown Prince Akishino, who is the current Emperor’s brother, Prince Hisahito – Akishino’s 17-year-old son, and third-in-line Prince Hitachi, who is 88 

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