Wu Shiyue
Wu Shiyue | |||||||||
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Born | 559 | ||||||||
Died | 635 (aged 75–76) | ||||||||
Spouse | Lady Xiangli Lady Yang | ||||||||
Issue | Wu Yuanqing, Prince Xian of Liang Wu Yuanshuang, Prince De of Wei Wu Zhiyuan, Prince Shu Wu Shun, Lady of Han Wu Zetian, Empress Tang and Zhou Lady Wu, Lady of Guo | ||||||||
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Father | Wu Hua | ||||||||
Mother | Lady Zhao |
Wǔ Shìyuē (simplified Chinese:
Initially, Wu married a woman from the Xiangli family, who gave birth to two sons named Wu Yuanqing and Wu Yuanshuang. Later he remarried a woman from the noble Yang family of the Hong Nong region. She was daughter, niece, and sister to several ministers and a close relation of the imperial family. By her, Wu had three daughters: Wu Shun (later the Lady of Han), Wu Zhao (Empress Wu Zetian) and the Lady of Guo.
After Wu died in 635 CE, his two sons were rude to their stepmother; after Wu Zetian came to power, she banished her half-brothers from the imperial court. At the same time she named Helan Minzhi, the son of her sister Wu Shun, as heir to her father. However, Wu Zetian became displeased with Helan Minzhi's conduct and sent him into exile where he died. Thereafter she recalled Wu Yuanshuang's son, Wu Chengsi, from exile and made him Wu Shiyue's successor.
Posthumously, Wu Shiyue received the titles of Zhou Zhongxiao Emperor and Supreme Founding Emperor of the Southern Zhou Dynasty (690–705).
Family
[edit]- Furen, of the Xiangli clan (
相 里 夫人 )- Wu Yuanqing, Prince Xian of Liang (
武 元 庆梁宪王), first son - Wu Yuanshuang, Prince De of Wei (
武 元 爽魏 德王 ), second son
- Wu Yuanqing, Prince Xian of Liang (
- Empress Xiaomingao, of the Yang clan (
孝明 高 皇后 )- Wu Shun, Lady of Han (
武 顺韓國 夫人 ), first daughter- Married Helan Yueshi (
賀 蘭 安 石 ) and had issue (one son and one daughter Lady Helan)
- Married Helan Yueshi (
- Wu Zetian, Empress Tang and Zhou (
武則 天 ), second daughter - Lady Wu, Lady of Guo (
郭 孝 慎 ), third daughter
- Wu Shun, Lady of Han (
References
[edit]- ^ Eisenberg, Andrew (December 2012). "EMPEROR GAOZONG, THE RISE OF WU ZETIAN, AND FACTIONAL POLITICS IN THE EARLY TANG". Tang Studies. 2012 (30): 45–69. doi:10.1179/0737503412Z.0000000003. ISSN 0737-5034.