Jianwen Emperor

Jianwen Emperor
Jianwen Emperor
Emperor of China
Reign 30 June 1398 – 13 July 1402
(&100000000000000040000004 years, &1000000000000001300000013 days)
Predecessor Hongwu Emperor
Successor Yongle Emperor
Spouse Empress Xiao Min Rang
Issue
Zhu Wenkui, Crown Prince Hejian
Zhu Wengui, Prince Huai of Run
Full name
Family name: Zhū (朱)
Given name: Yŭnwén (允炆)
Era name and dates
Jiànwén (建文): 6 February 1399 – 29 July 1402[1]
Posthumous name
Emperor Gongmin Hui[2][3]
恭閔惠皇帝
Temple name
None given[4]
House House of Zhu
Father Zhu Biao
Mother Empress Dowager Lü
Born 5 December 1377(1377-12-05)
Died 13 July 1402(1402-07-13) (aged 24)[5]

The Jianwen Emperor (Traditional Chinese: 建文; Simplified Chinese: 建文; pinyin: Jiànwén; Wade-Giles: Chien-wen) (5 December 1377–13 July 1402), with the personal name Zhu Yunwen (朱允炆), reigned as the second Emperor of the Ming dynasty. His reign name Jianwen means "Establishment of Civil Virtue".

His father, Zhu Biao, Crown Prince Yiwen (朱標), was the son and designated heir of the Hongwu Emperor, founder of the Ming Dynasty. When Zhu Biao died in 1392 before ascending to the throne, the Hongwu Emperor made Zhu Biao's son, Zhu Yunwen, his successor, rather than Zhu Biao's younger brothers Zhu Shuang (the Prince of Qin), Zhu Gang (the Prince of Jin) or Zhu Di (the Prince of Yan).

Jianwen's reign was short (1398–1402). After he assumed the throne, Jianwen Emperor began to suppress feudal lords, including his uncle Zhu Di. Feeling threatened, Zhu Di raised an army and in 1399, began to march toward Nanjing from his northern base in Beijing under the banner of the Jingnan campaign. In 1402, Zhu Di's army finally reached Nanjing and, after a brief fight, Zhu Di usurped Jianwen Emperor's throne and was crowned as Yongle Emperor.

To avoid capture, Jianwen and his concubines were said to have died in a fire at the palace during the coup. Jianwen was advised by a group of scholars, later known as the Four Martyrs that were killed by Yongle.

Some rumors state that Jianwen escaped and became a monk who actively organized anti-Zhu Di rebellions. There was a story also to be said that Jianwen disappeared mysteriously. A year after he became emperor, Yongle sent two agents to find the whereabouts of Jianwen. Rumor has it that one of the agents discovered Jianwen and even had a chat with him. Since records of Yongle's search of Jianwen were mostly destroyed, the truthfulness of this chat has yet to be proven. The record of Jianwen's rule was systematically erased by Yongle and no temple name was given to Jianwen.

There is no known grave of the Jianwen Emperor.[6]

Contents

Family

  • Father
  • Mother
    • Lady Lü (呂氏) (1321–1414), daughter of Lü Changben (呂昌本) and Zhu Biao's second wife, honored as Empress Dowager after her son ascended the throne

Consort

Formal Title Maiden Name Birth Death Father Mother Issue Notes
Empress Xiao Min Rang
孝愍讓皇后
Family name:
Ma (馬)
1378 13 July 1402 Ma Quan
馬全
- Zhu Wenkui, Crown Prince Hejian
Zhu Wengui, Prince Huai of Run

Sons

Number Name Formal Title Born Died Mother Spouse Issue Notes
1 Zhu Wenkui
朱文奎
Crown Prince Hejian
和簡太子
30 November 1396 unknown Empress Xiao Min Rang - - Believed to have perished in the palace fire that also killed his parents
2 Zhu Wengui
朱文圭
Prince Huai of Run
潤懷王
1401 1457
Zhongdu
Empress Xiao Min Rang - none Survived the palace fire that was believed to have killed his parents and brother; lived in obscurity for the rest of his life

Notes

  1. ^ On 30 July 1402 the Jianwen era was officially abolished by the new emperor, and the former Hongwu era was reestablished until the beginning of 1403 when the Yongle era officially started.
  2. ^ This posthumous name was given by the Qianlong Emperor of the Qing Dynasty in 1736. Previously, in 1644 the Prince of Fu had given him the posthumous name Emperor Rang (讓皇帝).
  3. ^ Given in 1736. The full posthumous name given by the Prince of Fu in 1644 was: Emperor Sitian Zhangdao Chengyi Yuangong Guanwen Yangwu Keren Duxiao Rang (嗣天章道誠懿淵功觀文揚武克仁篤孝讓皇帝).
  4. ^ Denied a temple name by the new emperor Yongle, but in 1644 the Prince of Fu (福王), the new self-proclaimed emperor of the Southern Ming, conferred on Emperor Jianwen the temple name Huizong (惠宗). However, this temple name is not recorded in most history books, unlike the temple name of Emperor Jingtai, also conferred by the Prince of Fu, but generally accepted in history books.
  5. ^ Supposed to have died in the burning of the Imperial Palace. However, it is widely believed that he survived and lived underground for many more years as a Buddhist monk.
  6. ^ The Ming Ancestor Tomb
Jianwen Emperor
Born: 5 December 1377 Died: 13 July 1402
Regnal titles
Preceded by
The Hongwu Emperor
Emperor of China
1398–1402
Succeeded by
The Yongle Emperor

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Emperor Jianwen — can refer to: * Emperor Jianwen of Jin (zh stp|s=晋简文帝|t=晉簡文帝|p=Jìn Jiǎnwéndì) (r. 371 372) * Emperor Jianwen of Liang (zh stp|s=梁简文帝|t=梁簡文帝|p=Liáng Jiǎnwéndì) (r. 549 551) * Jianwen Emperor (r. 1398 – 1402) was the Ming Emperor who reigned during …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Fei of Jin — Birth and death: 342[1]–November 23, 386[2][1] …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Jianwen of Liang — (梁簡文帝) (503 551), personal name Xiao Gang (蕭綱), courtesy name Shizuan (世纘), nickname Liutong (六通), was an emperor of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. He was initially not the crown prince of his father Emperor Wu, the founder of the dynasty,… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Yuan of Liang — (梁元帝) (508 555), personal name Xiao Yi (蕭繹), courtesy name Shicheng (世誠), nickname Qifu (七符), was an emperor of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. After his father Emperor Wu and brother Emperor Jianwen were successively taken hostage and… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Jianwen of Jin — (晋简文帝/晉簡文帝, pinyin Jìn Jiǎnwéndì, Wade Giles Chin Chien wen ti) (320 September 12, 372), personal name Sima Yu (司馬昱), courtesy name Daowan (道萬), was an emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (265 420) in China. He was the younger brother of Emperor… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Xiaowu of Jin — (晋孝武帝/晉孝武帝, pinyin Jìn Xiàowǔdì, Wade Giles Chin Hsiao wu ti) (362 396), personal name Sima Yao (司馬曜), courtesy name Changming (昌明), was an emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (265 420) in China. During his reign of being an emperor, Jin saw… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Wu of Liang — (梁武帝) (464 549), personal name Xiao Yan (蕭衍), courtesy name Shuda (叔達), nickname Lian er (練兒), was the founding emperor of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. His reign, until the end, was one of the most stable and prosperous during the Southern… …   Wikipedia

  • Emperor Xuan of Western Liang — Emperor Xuan of (Western) Liang ((西)梁宣帝) (519 562), personal name Xiao Cha (蕭詧), courtesy name Lisun (理孫), was a (disputed) emperor of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. He took the Liang throne under support from Western Wei after Western Wei… …   Wikipedia

  • Jianwen — ▪ emperor of Ming dynasty Wade Giles romanization  Chien wen , personal name (xingming)  Zhu Yunwen , posthumous name (shi)  Huidi  born Dec. 5, 1377, China died July 13, 1402?, Nanjing       reign name (nianhao) of the second emperor of the Ming …   Universalium

  • Emperor Ming of Western Liang — ((西)梁明帝) (542 585), personal name Xiao Kui (蕭巋), courtesy name Renyuan (仁遠), was a (disputed) emperor of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. As he, his father Emperor Xuan, and his son Emperor Jing controlled little territory and relied heavily on …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”