Japan's Emperor Akihito will break with a centuries-old burial tradition by opting to be cremated like most ordinary citizens in the densely-populated nation, officials said today.
That would mark the first time in almost four hundred years that a Japanese emperor has not been buried, according to the Imperial Household Agency.
It added that the 79-year-old emperor's wife, Empress Michiko, would also be cremated.
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"Cremation has become a common practise in Japan and imperial history has seen both cremations and burial," the palace said in a statement.
Cremation is common in the country of 128 million people where space is at a premium, while it is also a frequent practise in Buddhism.
The imperial couple's remains would be placed into a pair of relatively modest, yet-to-be-constructed tombs in the graveyard where wartime Emperor Showa, his father Emperor Taisho and their wives were buried.