Waaaaaiiiiiit a minute!! Mokou is an illegitimate child of the head of Fujiwara clan and her identity has been hidden since she was ever born. How the hell did she get into her family register??
JakeBob said: Why's it say white_hair? That doesn't look very white...
sometimes pink
Oh, I goofed!At the same time ...
...elderly youkai issue, "from any angle, you're still alive after nearly 2,000 years, you know." ...
...elderly youkai people barefacedly lie about their age ...
There are some people who are shameless enough to say an excessive lie like "Yukarin is 17 years old," ouch what are you doin...argh ggfgr@raa...Nikkei Bunbunmaru Newspaper
Related to Nikkei (Nihon Keizai) Shimbun.I forgot to notify the public office of moving out.A 1,300 year-old woman lives on in the family registerContinuous existences in the "family register."Due to the issue where a woman living in the Nara Period, who without ever having been removed from the family register, had been treated as still being alive, it was reported on the 29th of the current month in Yamatokooriyama City in the Nara Prefecture that there was a 1,300 year-old woman, who had been born in 700AD (around the first year of the Wadou Era), still recorded in a family register.
The woman was registered in Heijou-kyou, in the Nara Prefecture as Prince Kuramochi's daughter, Miss Fujiwara no Mokou and, according to the family register, was born in about 700AD, in the latter half of the Asuka period. Afterwards, notification of her death was never provided and so she "lived on in the family register".
The city's Citizen Welfare Section explained: "the register might have been made based on the 'Kouin no Nenjaku.' Today, all family registers have been computerised, but when this one was transferred to the computer, they probably forgot to delete the information."
The year the woman was born also encompasses the era of such historical figures as the intellectual, Hieda no Are and Princess Kaguya, who was immortalised in Japanese folklore.
Prince Kuramochi = Kuramochi no Miko
The Kouin no Nenjaku (庚寅年籍) is Japan's second oldest national census, introduced in 690AD.How the family register administration in question should beThe problem is continuing throughout Japan, where the whereabouts of some citizens over one hundred years old remain unknown.
With this in mind, in last month, the family register of a Hourai person from 80,000,000 years ago had been discovered in layers of earth from the latter part of the Cretaceous period, one thing is clear. Were she still alive, the whereabouts of a woman over 100,000,000 years old, who would have become the oldest living thing in the world, would be unknown.So how come a problem like this occurred?
According to the Family Register Law, in order to erase a family register, a notification of death must be submitted to the local government. However, when asked, each of the local governments in Japan reported cases where a family had emigrated to another country or all members had died in a war or natural disaster and had therefore not been able to notify the local government of the death of their relative. As a result, there have been many cases where the status of the deceased person is left as "living."
In the city, officials say they have consulted the Nara Legal Affairs Bureau and are advancing plans to remove the name from the registry.