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Empress Wang (王皇后, personal name unknown) (8 BC-23), formally Empress Xiaoping (孝平皇后), formally during her father Wang Mang's Xin Dynasty Duchess Dowager of Ding'an (定安太后) then Princess Huanghuang (黃皇室主) was an empress during Han Dynasty -- the very last of the Western Han Dynasty -- who was the daughter of the eventual usurper Wang Mang. Her husband was Emperor Ping. She is largely viewed by historians as a tragic figure, the victim of circumstances, who, in her young life, tried to maintain her loyalty to her husband of only a few years, but whose faithfulness meant that she eventually had to allow herself to die tragically at the end of her father's reign. Centuries: 2nd century BC - 1st century BC - 1st century Decades: 50s BC 40s BC 30s BC 20s BC 10s BC - 0s BC - 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 13 BC 12 BC 11 BC 10 BC 9 BC - 8 BC - 7 BC 6 BC 5 BC 4 BC 3 BC Births...
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Wang Mang (çè½, pinyin: Wáng MÄng) (45 BCâOctober 6, 23), courtesy name Jujun (å·¨å), was a Han Dynasty official who seized the throne from the Liu family and founded Xin (or Hsin) Dynasty (æ°æ, meaning new dynasty), ruling AD 8â23. ...
Wang Mang (王莽, pinyin: Wáng Măng) (45 BC–October 6, 23) was a Han Dynasty official who seized the throne from the Liu family and founded Xin Dynasty (新朝, meaning new dynasty), ruling AD 8–23. ...
Emperor is also a Norwegian black metal band; see Emperor (band). ...
Han commanderies and kingdoms AD 2. ...
Emperor Ping of Han (9 BCâAD 6) was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty from 1 AD to 6 AD. After Emperor Ai died childless, the throne was passed to his cousin Ping - a child of 9 years old. ...
Family background
Empress Wang was born in 8 BC, to Wang Mang -- who had then resigned the powerful commander of armed forces position, which he held under his cousin Emperor Cheng and briefly under Emperor Cheng's successor and nephew Emperor Ai, to whom he was not related -- and his wife Lady Wang, the daughter of Wang Xian (王咸) the Marquess of Yichun. In her childhood, her father would several times fall in danger of the political climate of the times, due to hatred by Emperor Ai's grandmother Grand Empress Dowager Fu. However, in 1 BC, after Emperor Ai's death, Wang Mang's aunt Grand Empress Dowager Wang would seize power back from Emperor Ai's male favorite (and probable lover) Dong Xian and recall Wang Mang to serve as regent to her stepgrandson, the young Emperor Ping. Centuries: 2nd century BC - 1st century BC - 1st century Decades: 50s BC 40s BC 30s BC 20s BC 10s BC - 0s BC - 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 13 BC 12 BC 11 BC 10 BC 9 BC - 8 BC - 7 BC 6 BC 5 BC 4 BC 3 BC Births...
Emperor Cheng of Han (51 BCâ7 BC) was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty ruling from 33 BC until 7 BC. Under Emperor Cheng, the Han dynasty continued its slide into disintegration while the Wang clan continued its slow grip on power and on governmental affairs as promoted...
Emperor Ai of Han (27 BCâ1 BC) was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty. ...
Empress Wang (ççå, personal name unknown) (d. ...
Consort Fu (å
æå, personal name unkown) (d. ...
Centuries: 2nd century BC - 1st century BC - 1st century Decades: 50s BC 40s BC 30s BC 20s BC 10s BC - 0s BC - 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 6 BC 5 BC 4 BC 3 BC 2 BC 1 BC 1 2 3 4 // Events Births December 25 - Jesus (died about...
Empress Wang Zhengjun (Traditional Chinese: çæ¿å), official short-form imperial title Empress Yuan of Han, later and more commonly known as Grand Empress Dowager Wang (b. ...
Dong Xian (è£è³¢) (23 BC(?)-1 BC) was a Han Dynasty politician who quickly rose from obscurity as a minor official to being the most powerful official in the imperial administration of Emperor Ai within a span of a few years, because of his personal relationship with Emperor Ai, likely a...
Marriage Once Wang Mang became regent, he built a personality cult around himself, and was able to become very popular among the people. In 2, Wang Mang decided to have his daughter married to Emperor Ping to further affirm his position. Initially, he started a selection process of eligible noble young ladies (after declaring, in accordance with ancient customs, that Emperor Ping will have one wife and 11 concubines). However, then, in an act of false modesty intended to create the opposite result, he petitioned Grand Empress Dowager Wang that his daughter not be considered -- and then started a petition drive by the people to have his daughter be selected as empress. The petitioners stormed the outside of the palace, and Grand Empress Dowager Wang, overwhelmed by the display of affection for Wang Mang, ordered that Wang Mang's daughter be made empress. In 4, Emperor Ping officially married her and created her empress. Adolf Hitler built a strong cult of personality, based on the Führerprinzip. ...
This article is about the year 2. ...
This article is about the year 4. ...
Young widowhood and temporary status as empress dowager Circa 5, Emperor Ping, having grown older, appeared to have grown out of a heart condition that he suffered earlier, and it became fairly plain that he resented Wang Mang for slaughtering his uncles in 3 and not allowing his mother to visit him in the capital Chang'an. Wang Mang therefore resolved to murder the emperor. In winter 5, Wang Mang submitted pepper wine (considered in those days to be capable of chasing away evil spirits) to the 13-year-old emperor, but had the wine spiked with poison. As the emperor was suffering the effects of hte poison, Wang Mang wrote a secret petition to the gods, in which he offered to substitute his life for Emperor Ping's, and then have the petition locked away. (Historians generally believed that Wang Mang had two motives in doing this -- one was, in case Emperor Ping recovered from the poisoning, to use this to try to absolve himself of involvement in the poisoning, and the second was to leave for posterity evidence of his faithfulness.) After a few days of suffering, Emperor Ping died. Empress Wang became a widow at the age of 12. After Emperor Ping's death, Wang Mang assumed the unprecedented title of acting emperor (假皇帝). For other uses, see number 5. ...
This article is about the year 3. ...
Changan listen? (Simplified Chinese: é¿å®; Traditional Chinese: é·å®; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: Chang-an) is the ancient capital of more than ten dynasties in China. ...
In 6, Wang Mang selected Emperor Ping's cousin-once-removed (a great-great-grandson of Emperor Xuan), the 2-year-old Liu Ying (劉嬰) as the next emperor (to be known, perhaps incorrectly at least in English, as Emperor Ruzi). However, due to his young age, and also because Wang Mang wanted to try out his acting emperor title longer to see if the people would support him if he seized the throne for himself, Emperor Ruzi never took the throne, but was given the title crown prince. (Wang Mang's promise to the people at the time was that he would return the throne to Emperor Ruzi as soon as he was sufficiently grown.) Empress Wang was given the title empress dowager. This article is about the year 6. ...
A cousin chart identifies the correct name for the relationship between two people with a common ancestor. ...
Emperor Xuan of Han (91 BCâ49 BC) was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty from 74 BC to 49 BC. Emperor Xuan was the great grandson of Emperor Wu. ...
Emperor Ruzi of Han (AD 5–AD 9), commonly known as Ying the Kid (ch. ...
A Crown Prince or Crown Princess is the heir or heiress apparent to the throne in a royal or imperial monarchy. ...
Empress Dowager (Chinese, Korean and Japanese: 皇太后; Chinese pinyin Húang Tài Hòu, Korean pronunciation: Hwang Tae Hu, Japanese pronunciation: Kōtaigō) was title given to the mother of a Chinese emperor. ...
In 8, Wang Mang officially seized the throne and established the Xin Dynasty. In 9, the toddler Emperor Ruzi was created the Duke of Ding'an (定安公), and Empress Dowager Wang was given the title of Duchess Dowager of Ding'an. This article is about the year 8. ...
Wang Mang (王莽, pinyin: Wáng Măng) (45 BC–October 6, 23) was a Han Dynasty official who seized the throne from the Liu family and founded Xin Dynasty (新朝, meaning new dynasty), ruling AD 8–23. ...
This article is about the year 9. ...
Life during Xin Dynasty Traditional historical accounts described Empress Wang as an unhappy widow during her father's reign, still bearing seeds of loyalty in her mind to the overthrown Han Dynasty. She often claimed to be ill and refused to attend imperial gatherings. Wang Mang, believing that he could solve her unhappiness by having her remarry, changed her title from Duchess Dowager of Ding'an to Princess Huanghuang in 10, to terminate her formal linkage with the Han Dynasty. He also intended to marry her to the son of one of his important officials, Sun Jian (孫建). He instructed Sun Jian's son to dress himself well and accompany physicians to go visit Princess Huanghuang. She was greatly offended and would not receive any guests afterwards. For other uses, see number 10. ...
Also in 10, another potential suiter for Princess Huanghuang would get himself in trouble for the way that he tried to marry her. Zhen Xun (甄尋), the mayor of Chang'an and the son of Wang Mang's trusted ally and friend Zhen Feng (甄豐), had designs on both greater power and Princess Huanghuang. Because Wang Mang highly relied on spreading false prophecies to the people to persuade them that he was the proper new emperor, Zhen Feng took the chance to create some false prophecies of his own. His first attempt was a prophecy that indicated that the empire should be divided into two parts, each with a viceroy -- with the western empire having his father Zhen Feng as viceroy, and the eastern empire having another important official Ping Yan (平晏) as viceroy. Wang Mang, although displeased, decided to go along with this prophecy, and in fact commissioned Zhen Feng and Ping as viceroys. Having seen results, Zhen Xun created a second false prophecy -- that Princess Huanghuang should be married to him. Wang Mang decided to take this chance to suppress all prophecies that did not come from him, and ordered that Zhen Xun be arrested. Zhen Feng committed suicide, while Zhen Xun fled. In 11, he was finally arrested and exiled to Sanwei (三危, in modern Jiuquan, Gansu). For other uses, see number 10. ...
A viceroy is somebody who governs a country or province as a substitute for the monarch. ...
Events Germania Inferior and the Rhine secured by Germanicus Artabanus III of the Arsacid Dynasty becomes ruler of Parthia Births April 4 - Drusilla, daughter of Germanicus and Agrippina the younger. ...
Jiuquan (酒泉) is a city with several hundredthousand inhabitants in the western part of the Chinese province Gansu. ...
Gansu (Simplified Chinese: çè; Traditional Chinese: çè
; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: Kan-su, or modified as Kan-suh) is a province located in the northwest of the Peoples Republic of China. ...
Death There would be no further historical records about Princess Huanghuang until 23, when she would suffer her death. At that time, her father's Xin Dynasty was in shambles, with various agrarian and other rebellions against him, and with one of the strongest rebel forces, under Liu Xuan (劉玄), a distant descendant of the Han Dynasty imperial house, having entered the capital Chang'an, the people of Chang'an rose against Wang Mang as well. They set fire to the main imperial palace, Weiyang Palace, and the fire quickly spread to the part of the palace where Princess Huanghuang lived. She sighed and said, "How can I again face my Han relations?" She then threw herself into the fire and died. ...
Emperor Gengshi of Han, ch. ...
Preceded by: Empress Fu | Empress of Western Han Dynasty 4–5 | Succeeded by: none (dynasty interrupted) | Empress of China 4–5 | Succeeded by: Empress Wang of the Xin Dynasty | |