Reiwa period, in Japan, the imperial reign period that began on May 1, 2019, following the abdication of Emperor Akihito and the elevation of his son Naruhito to the Chrysanthemum Throne. The two ideograms (kanji) constituting the period’s reign name (gengō) are rei (meaning “order” or “auspicious”) and wa (“harmony”). The official English translation of the period is “Beautiful Harmony.”
Typically, a team of scholars is enlisted to create a gengō, which is not revealed until the death of an emperor marks the close of the previous era. In December 2017, however, Akihito formally declared his intention to abdicate on April 30, 2019, at which time the Heisei period would come to a end. Because the gengō appears on coins, government documents, and a variety of other printed materials, the name for the Reiwa period was unveiled a month prior to the enthronement of Naruhito in the interest of easing the transition. The imperial abdication—Japan’s first in more than two centuries—and the early announcement were not the only breaks with tradition; the gengō itself originated from a wholly novel source. Previous reign names had been taken from classical Chinese literature, but Reiwa was derived from the Man’yō-shū, the most revered poetry anthology in Japanese literature. The specific passage that inspired the reign name prefaced a series of poems about plum blossoms, and Prime Minister Abe Shinzo stated that Reiwa was chosen to represent the potential for all Japanese people to bloom beautifully as if after a long winter.