was the 54th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. Ninmyà Â's reign lasted from 833 to 850, during the Heian period.His personal name (imina) was . After his death, he was given the title .
Ninmyà  was the second son of Emperor Saga and the Empress Tachibana no Kachiko. He was the first emperor to be born in Heian-kyo and his birthdate was calculated by later historians based on entries in the Nihon Sandai Jitsuroku. Princess Masako (Empress of Emperor Junna) was his younger sister by the same parents and born in the same year, so it is presumed that she was his twin sister, although there are no historical sources that explicitly state that the Emperor and Princess were twins.
On February 28, 833, he ascended to the throne after his uncle, Emperor Junna, abdicated. Initially, Prince Tsunesada, the son of Emperor Junna, was designated as the heir apparent. However, following the Jà Âwa Incident of 842, Prince Tsunetsada was deposed, and Prince Michiyasu (Emperor Montoku), the eldest son of Emperor Ninmyà Â, was appointed Crown Prince. It is said that this was due to the emperor's desire to have his own son succeed to the throne, and a conspiracy by Fujiwara no Yoshifusa, Prince Michiyasu's uncle.
The culture of Tang-style rituals and Chinese poetry and prose, which flourished during the Kà Ânin and Tenchà  eras (810-834), reached its peak during the Jà Âwa era (834-848). Emperor Ninmyà  was fond of classical history, medicine, poetry, calligraphy, music, and archery. One of his poems remains in the Keikokushu.
Emperor Ninmyà  was said to have been sickly from a young age, and the Shoku Nihon Koki records various illnesses from around the age of seven. Even after his enthronement, he frequently prepared medicines (elixirs and medicinal herbs) and is said to have possessed knowledge comparable to that of a physician. Furthermore, the entry for the death of Fujiwara no Yoshisuke in the Sandai Jitsuroku states that the Emperor ordered Yoshisuke and other close associates to taste the medicine he had prepared. The Shoku Nihon Koki, in its entry for February 22, 3rd year of Kasho, states that the Emperor participated in a court meeting from behind a curtain, suggesting that he was listening to the discussions while hiding himself from view due to his serious illness (the Emperor died a month later).
In 843, Fumuro no Miyatamaro was accused of plotting rebellion, and his family was exiled. There are various theories regarding the underlying cause of this incident, one of which was that the Fujiwara clan sought to eliminate a potential rival who was also involved in trade.
Ninmyà  had nine Empresses, Imperial consorts, and concubines (kà Âi); and the emperor had 24 Imperial sons and daughters. In 845, Ninmyà  suspected an affair between his consort, Mikunimachi, who bore him a son (Sadato, then known as Minamoto no Noboru), and Fujiwara no Arisada, the younger brother of his consort Fujiwara no Sadako and a close confidant since his childhood, and demoted him to a provincial official position.
On March 19, 850, he abdicated in favor of Emperor Montoku due to illness. He died two days later, on March 21 of the same year. He was 41 years old.
The Imperial Household Agency designates , in Fushimi-ku, Kyoto, as the location of Ninmyà Â's tomb. Per the Montoku Tennà  Jitsuroku Emperor Ninmyà  died in the Seiryà Âden Palace. His son, Emperor Montoku, considered the Seiryà Âden Palace to be inauspicious and dismantled it, moving it to the side of the mausoleum, where it became a temple called Kashà Â-dà Â, which maintained the grave. This became the first instance of the Seiryà Âden Palace being rebuilt during the Heian period. Later, the temple was renamed Jà Âgan-ji (per the Nihon Sandai Jitsuroku). It was listed in the Engishiki under "Imperial tombs; however, by the end of the Kamakura period, the temple had been abolished and the location of the grave unknown. During the Edo period, in 1862-1863, during the Bunkyà « Restoration of Mausoleums, the current location (Higashi Kurumazuka) was official designated as Emperor Ninmyà Â's mausoleum.
Ninmyà  ascended to the throne following the abdication of his uncle, Emperor Junna.
Shortly after Ninmyo was enthroned, he designated an heir. He named Prince Tsunesada, a son of former Emperor Junna, as the crown prince.
In his lifetime, Ninmyà  could not have anticipated that his third son, Prince Tokiyasu, would eventually ascend the throne in 884 as Emperor Kà Âkà Â.
The years of Ninmyà Â's reign are more specifically identified by more than one era name (nengà Â).
is a collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras.
In general, this elite group included only three to four men at a time. These were hereditary courtiers whose experience and background would have brought them to the pinnacle of a life's career. During Ninmyà Â's reign, this apex of the Daijà Â-kan included:
Consort (Nyà Âgo) later Empress Dowager (Tai-Kà Âtaigà Â): Fujiwara no Junshi (è¤åÂÂé ÂÃ¥ÂÂ; 809âÂÂ871), Fujiwara no FuyutsuguâÂÂs daughter
Consort (Nyà Âgo): Fujiwara no Takushi/Sawako (è¤åÂÂæ²¢åÂÂ; d.839), Fujiwara no FusatsuguâÂÂs daughter
Consort (Nyà Âgo): Fujiwara no Teishi/Sadako (è¤åÂÂè²ÂÃ¥ÂÂ; d.864), Fujiwara no TadamoriâÂÂs daughter
Court lady: Shigeno no Tsunako (æ»ÂéÂÂç¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ), Shigeno no SadanushiâÂÂs daughter
Consort (Nyà Âgo): Tachibana no Kageko (æ©Âå½±åÂÂ; d. 864), Tachibana no UjikimiâÂÂs daughter
Consort (Nyà Âgo): Fujiwara Musuko (è¤åÂÂæÂ¯åÂÂ)
Court Attendant (Koui): Ki no Taneko (ç´Â種åÂÂ; d. 869), Ki no NatoraâÂÂs daughter
Court Attendant (Koui) (deposed in 845): Mikuni-machi (ä¸Âå½çº), daughter of Mikuni clan
Court lady: Fujiwara no Katoko (è¤åÂÂè³ÂçÂȌÂÂ), Fujiwara no Fukutomaro's daughter
Court lady: Fujiwara no Warawako (è¤åÂÂå°Âç«¥åÂÂ), Fujiwara no Michità Â's daughter
Court lady: Princess Takamune (é«Âå®Â女çÂÂ), Prince Okaya's daughter
Court lady: daughter of Yamaguchi clan (山壿°Âã®å¨Â)
Nyoju: Kudaraà  Toyofuku's daughter
Court lady (Nyoju): Kudara no Yà Âkyà  (ç¾æ¸Â永栶), Kudara no Kyà Âfuku's daughter
(from unknown women)