Five dynasties and ten empires
The period of the Five Dynasties and Ten Empires ( Chinese 五代 十 國 / 五代 十 国 , Pinyin wǔ dài shí guó ) from 907 to 960 was a time of political upheaval in China , from the end of the Tang Dynasty to the establishment of the Song Dynasty . Five dynasties followed one another in a very short time, and more than a dozen independent states emerged in the south of the country, traditionally only ten of them being mentioned (hence the name "Ten Empires").
overview
The Five Dynasties:
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The Ten Realms: | Other realms: |
prehistory
This period was a direct result of the political differences at the end of the Tang Dynasty. Power increasingly moved from the hands of the imperial government to regional military governors ( Jiedushi ). The Huang Chao Rebellion (875–884), which devastated large areas, was a heavy blow to the central government. The powerless Tang emperor returned to the capital, but was under the rule of his eunuchs and military. In the early 10th century, the central government lost almost all power over the powerful Jiedushi, so that they could rule independently.
The North
At the time, Zhu Wen was the most powerful warlord in northern China. Originally a member of the Huang Chao rebel army, he switched sides and proved instrumental in putting down the rebellion of the Tang Dynasty. For this he received the title Xuanwu Jiedushi. Within a few years he was able to consolidate his power, conquer his neighbors and force a relocation of the imperial capital to Luoyang within his sphere of influence. In 904 he had Emperor Zhaozong murdered and replaced him with his 13-year-old son, who ruled as a puppet for three years until he forced him to abdicate in his favor in 907. With that he founded the Later Liang Dynasty with himself as the first emperor.
Meanwhile, several of his rivals had also proclaimed independent empires, and not all of them accepted the newly established dynasty as head. Li Cunxu and Liu Shouguang in particular challenged the new regime and fought for supremacy in northern China - Li Cunxu with success: After defeating Liu Shouguang, Li Cunxu declared himself emperor in 923, swept away the later Liang dynasty and replaced it the later Tang Dynasty. Much of the north was reunited under his rule, and around 925 Li Cunxu even managed to conquer the area of the early Shu in southern China (Sichuan Province).
There was then a few years of relative peace.
But unrest soon broke out again: in 934 Sichuan declared itself independent again, in 936 Shi Jingtang, warlord (Jiedushi) in Taiyuan, rebelled with the help of the Chitan emperor of Manchuria . In return, Shi Jingtang promised the Chitan 16 prefectures in the Youyun area (now Hebei and Beijing) and an annual tribute. The rebellion was successful, and Shi Jingtang became Emperor of China and founder of the Later Jin Dynasty that same year. Over time, however, the Chitan saw the Later Jin less and less as allies, but more and more as their representatives in China. In 943 they decided to take the government into their own hands and within three years they reached the capital Kaifeng , which marked the end of the Later Jin Dynasty.
After that, however, the Chitan could not or would not hold the conquered areas in China and withdrew at the beginning of the following year. The Jiedushi Liu Zhiyuan filled the resulting power vacuum and proclaimed the Later Han Dynasty in 947 - the most short-lived of the five dynasties, because a coup brought General Guo Wei to the throne just 4 years later, the founder of the Later Zhou Dynasty. A member of the Later Han, however, Liu Chong, founded a counter-empire in Taiyuan as the Northern Han and again called the Chitan to help in the fight against the Later Zhou. After Guo Wei's death in 951, his adopted son Chai Rong took the throne and pursued a policy of expansion and reunification. In 954 he defeated the combined forces of the Chitan and Northern Han; between 956 and 958 he inflicted severe defeats on the southern kelp - at the time the most powerful group in southern China - and forced them to cede all areas north of the Yangtze . In 959 Chai Rong attacked the Chitan Empire with the aim of recapturing the areas ceded by the Late Jin. After a series of victories, however, he fell victim to an illness.
In 960 the period of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms ended with the coup and the seizure of power by General Zhao Kuangyin (Northern Song Dynasty). In the following two decades, Zhao Kuangyin and his successor, Zhao Kuangyi, succeeded in subjugating all other empires in China, and completely reuniting China after the defeat of the Northern Han in 979.
The South
In contrast to northern China, where the dynasties followed one another in rapid succession, the different empires in southern China coexisted more or less side by side in different demarcated geographical areas: around 920, the Wu Empire existed on the territory of the present-day provinces of Jiangsu, Anhui, and Jiangxi. Wuyue, on the other hand, occupied today's Zhejiang Province, Min the Fujian Province, southern Han covered Guangdong, Chu was in Hunan, Jingnan stretched over Jiangling, Hubei Province and the early Shu was in today's Sichuan. Sichuan fell under the control of the north in 925, but regained its independence as the Late Shu in 934.
Although the south was more stable than the north, wars also shook southern China. Wu fought with all of the neighbors, a battle that continued when the Southern Tang captured the area in 937. Around 940, the Southern Tang used the internal crises of the Min and Chu to incorporate both empires in turn. This made them the most powerful regime in southern China. However, they were unable to ward off the incursion of the Late Zhou Dynasty and between 956 and 958 they lost all areas north of the Yangtze.
The Northern Song Dynasty, founded around 960, had set the reunification of China as its primary goal: Jingnan and Wuping were overrun in 963; the Late Shu followed in 965, the Southern Han around 971, the Southern Tang in 975. Finally, Wuyue and Qingyuan also had to cede their land to the Northern Song. Thus in 978 the entire south of China was in the hands of a central government.
Ruler of the Five Dynasties and the Ten Kingdoms
Temple name ( 廟號 , miàohào ) |
Posthumous name ( 諡 號 , shìhào ) |
Personal name | Reign | Era ( 年號 , niánhào ) and corresponding years |
---|---|---|---|---|
Five dynasties | ||||
Later Liang dynasty 後梁 , Hòu Liáng 907–923 | ||||
Tài Zǔ 太祖 | - |
Zhū Wēn 朱溫 or
Zhū Huàng |
907-912 | Kāipíng 開平 (907–911) Qiánhuà 乾 化 (911–912) |
- | Mò Dì 末帝 | Zhū Zhèn 朱 瑱 | 913-923 | Qiánhuà 乾 化 (913–915) Zhēnmíng 貞 明 (915–921) |
Later Tang dynasty 後唐 , Hòu Táng 923–936 | ||||
Zhuāng Zōng 莊宗 | - | Lǐ Cúnxù 李存勗 | 923-926 | Tóngguāng 同 光 |
Míng Zōng 明 宗 | - |
Lǐ Sìyuán 李 嗣源 or Lǐ Dǎn 李 亶 |
926-933 | Tiānchéng 天成 (926–930) Chángxīng 長興 (930-933) |
- | Mǐn Dì 節 閔 帝 | Lǐ Cónghòu 李 從 厚 | 933-934 | Yìngshùn 應 順 |
- | Mò Dì 末帝 | Lǐ Cóngkē 李 從 珂 | 934-936 | Qīngtài 清泰 |
Later Jin dynasty 後晉 , Hòu Jìn 936–947 | ||||
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | - | Shí Jìngtáng 石敬瑭 | 936-942 | Tiānfú 天 福 |
- | Chū Dì 出 帝 | Shí Chóngguì 石 重 貴 | 942-947 | Tiānfú 天 福 (942–944) Kāiyùn 開 運 (944–947) |
Later Han dynasty 後 漢 Hòu Hàn 936–947 | ||||
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | - | Liú Zhīyuǎn 劉 知 遠 | 947-948 | Tiānfú 天 福 (947) Qiányòu 乾祐 (948) |
- | Yǐn Dì 隱 帝 | Liú Chéngyòu 劉承祐 | 948-950 | Qiányòu 乾祐 |
Later Zhou dynasty 後周 , Hòu Zhōu 951–960 | ||||
Tài Zǔ 太祖 | - | Guō Wēi 郭威 | 951-954 | Guǎngshùn 廣順 (951–954) Xiǎndé 顯 德 (954) |
Shì Zōng 世宗 | - | Chái Róng 柴榮 | 954-959 | Xiǎndé 顯 德 |
- | Gōng Dì 恭帝 | Chái Zōngxùn 柴 宗 訓 | 959-960 | Xiǎndé 顯 德 |
Ten realms | ||||
Wuyue Empire 吳越 904–978 | ||||
Tài Zǔ 太祖 | Wǔsù Wáng 武 肅 王 | Qián Liú 錢 鏐 | 904-932 | Tiānbǎo 天寶 (908–923) Bǎodà 寶 大 (923–925) |
Shìzōng 世宗 | Wénmù Wáng 文 穆王 | Qián Yuánquàn 錢 元 瓘 | 932-941 | - |
Chéngzōng 成 宗 | Zhōngxiàn Wáng 忠 獻 王 | Qián Zuǒ 錢 佐 | 941-947 | - |
- | Zhōngxùn Wáng 忠 遜 王 | Qián Zōng 錢 倧 | 947 | - |
- | Zhōngyì Wáng 忠 懿王 | Qián Chù 錢 俶 | 947-978 | - |
Min empire 閩 909–945 with Yin empire 殷 943–945 | ||||
Tàizǔ 太祖 | Zhōngyì Wáng 忠 懿王 | Wáng Shěnzhī 王 審 知 | 909-925 | - |
- | - | Wáng Yánhàn 王延翰 | 925-926 | - |
Tàizōng 太宗 | Huìdì 惠帝 | Wáng Yánjūn 王延鈞 | 926-935 | Lóngqǐ 龍 啟 933-935 Yǒnghé 永和 935 |
Kāngzōng 康 宗 | - | Wáng Jìpéng 王繼鵬 | 935-939 | Tōngwén 通 文 |
Jǐngzōng 景宗 | - | Wáng Yánxī 王延 羲 | 939-944 | Yǒnglóng 永隆 |
- | Tiāndé Dì 天 德 帝 (as Emperor of Yin) | Wáng Yánzhèng 王延政 | 943-945 | Tiāndé 天 德 |
Jingnan - 荊南 or Nanping Empire 南平 906–963 | ||||
- | Wǔxìn Wáng 武 信 王 | Gāo Jìxīng 高 季 興 | 909-928 | - |
- | Wénxiàn Wáng 文獻 王 | Gāo Cónghuì 高 從 誨 | 928-948 | - |
- | Zhēnyì Wáng 貞 懿王 | Gāo Bǎoróng 高 寶 融 | 948-960 | - |
- | Shìzhōng 侍中 | Gāo Bǎoxù 高 寶 勗 | 960-962 | - |
- | - | Gāo Jìchōng 高 繼 沖 | 962-963 | - |
Chu Reich 楚 897–951 | ||||
- | Wǔmù Wáng 武 穆王 | Mǎ Yīn 馬殷 | 897-930 | - |
- | Héngyáng Wáng 衡陽 王 | Mǎ Xīshēng 馬希 聲 | 930-932 | - |
- | Wénzhāo Wáng 文 昭王 | Mǎ Xīfàn 馬希範 | 932-947 | - |
- | Fèidì 废帝 | Mǎ Xīguǎng 馬希 廣 | 947-950 | - |
- | Gōngxiào Wáng 恭 孝王 | Mǎ Xī'è 馬希 萼 | 950 | - |
- | - | Mǎ Xīchong 馬希崇 | 950-951 | - |
Wu -Reich 吳 904–937 | ||||
Tài Zǔ 太祖 | Xiàowǔ Dì 孝 武帝 | Yáng Xíngmì 楊行密 | 904-905 | Tiānyòu 天祐 |
Liè Zōng 烈 宗 | J Dng Dì 景帝 | Yáng Wò 楊渥 | 905-908 | Tiānyòu 天祐 |
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | Xuān Dì 宣帝 | Yáng Lóngyǎn 楊隆 演 | 908-921 | Tiānyòu 天祐 (908–919) Wǔyì 武義 (919–921) |
- | Ruì Dì 睿 帝 | Yáng Pǔ 楊 溥 | 921-937 | Shùnyì 順義 (921–927) Qiánzhēn 乾 貞 (927–929) |
Southern Tang Empire 南唐 937–975 | ||||
Xiān Zhǔ 先 主 or Liè Zǔ 烈祖 |
- | Lǐ Biàn 李 昪 | 937-943 | Shēngyuán ( 昇 元 ) |
Zhōng Zhǔ 中 主 or Yuán Zōng 元 宗 |
- | Lǐ Jǐng 李 璟 | 943-961 | Bǎodà 保 大 (943–958) Jiāotài 交 泰 (958) |
Hòu Zhǔ 後主 | Wǔ Wáng 武王 | Lǐ Yù 李煜 | 961-975 | - |
Southern Han Empire 南 漢 917–971 | ||||
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | Tiān Huáng Dà Dì 天皇 大帝 | Liú Yán 劉 龑 | 917-925 | Qiánhēng 乾 亨 (917–925) Báilóng 白龍 (925–928) |
- | Shāng Dì 殤 帝 | Liú Fēn 劉 玢 | 941-943 | Guāngtiān 光 天 |
Zhōng Zōng 中 宗 | - | Liú Chéng 劉 晟 | 943-958 | Yìngqián 應 乾 (943) Qiánhé 乾 和 (943–958) |
Hòu Zhǔ 後主 | - | Liú Cháng 劉 鋹 | 958-971 | Dàbǎo 大 寶 |
Northern Han Empire (Bei) 951–979 | ||||
Shì Zǔ 世祖 | Shén Wǔ Dì 神 武帝 | LiúMín 劉 旻 | 951-954 | Qiányòu 乾祐 951–954 |
Ruì Zōng 睿宗 | Xiào Hé Dì 孝 和帝 | LiúChéng Jūn 劉承鈞 | 954-970 | Qiányòu 乾祐 954-957 Tiānhuì 天 會 957-970 |
Shào Zhǔ 少 主 | - | LiúJì Ēn 劉繼恩 | 970 | - |
- | Yīng Wǔ Dì 英 武帝 | LiúJì Yuán 劉繼 元 | 970-982 | Guǎngyùn 廣 運 970–982 |
Former Shu Kingdom (Qian) 907-925 | ||||
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | - | Wáng Jiàn 王建 | 907-918 | Tiānfù 天 復 907 Wǔchéng 武 成 908–910 |
Hòu Zhǔ 後主 | - | Wáng Yǎn 王衍 | 918-925 | Qiándé 乾 德 918–925 Xiánkāng 咸康 925 |
Later Shu Empire (Hou) 934–965 | ||||
Gāo Zǔ 高祖 | - | Mèng Zhī Xiáng 孟知祥 | 934 | Míngdé 明德 |
Hòu Zhǔ 後主 | - | Mèng Chǎng 孟昶 | 938-965 | Míngdé 明德 934-938 Guǎngzhèng 廣 政 938–965 |
Source editions
- Yin Shu (Chinese 尹 洙), Spring and Autumn of the Five Dynasties Wudai Chunqiu (Chinese 五代 春秋) in 2 chapters in Zhou Guangpei , Lidai biji xiaoshuo jicheng (Chinese 历代 笔记 小说 集成), Hebei Jiaoyu Chubanshe Publishing House, Shijiazhuang 1994 , ISBN 7-5434-2092-9 .
literature
- Frederick W. Mote: Imperial China 900–1800. Harvard University Press, Cambridge (Mass.) 1999, ISBN 0-674-44515-5 .