Emperor Xizong of Jin

Emperor Xizong of Jin (28 February 1119 – 9 January 1150), personal name Hela, sinicised name Wanyan Dan, was the third emperor of the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty, which ruled northern China between the 12th and 13th centuries. He reigned for about 15 years from 1135 to 1150. During his reign, the Jin dynasty launched several military campaigns against the Han Chinese-led Southern Song dynasty in southern China.

Emperor Xizong of Jin
Emperor of the Jin dynasty
Reign10 February 1135 – 9 January 1150
PredecessorEmperor Taizong of Jin
SuccessorWanyan Liang
Born28 February 1119
Died9 January 1150(1150-01-09) (aged 30)
SpouseEmpress Daoping
Samao
Consort Xian
Consort De
Lady Jiagu
Lady Zhang
Lady Peiman
Zhao Jingu
Zhao Saiyue
Zhao Feiyan
Zhao Yuqiang
Zhao Yupan
Zhao Jinnu
Zhao Chuanzhu
Zhao Jinyin
Zhao Tanxiang
IssueSons:
Wanyan Ji'an
Wanyan Daoji
Daughters:
Princess of Zheng
Princess of Ji
Princess of Dai
daughter
Princess of Liang
Princess of Shen
Full name
Wanyan Dan (sinicised name)
Hela (Jurchen name)
Era dates
Tianhui (天會; 1135–1138)
Tianjuan (天眷; 1138–1141)
Huangtong (皇統; 1141–1149)
Posthumous name
Emperor Hongji Zuanwu Zhuangjing Xiaocheng (弘基纘武莊靖孝成皇帝) (after 1179)
Emperor Wuling (武靈皇帝) (1161–1179)
Prince Donghun (東昏王) (1150–1161)
Temple name
Xizong (熙宗) (after 1187)
Minzong (閔宗) (1161–1187)
FatherWanyan Zongjun
MotherLady Pucha
Emperor Xizong of Jin
Chinese金熙宗
Hela
Traditional Chinese合剌
Simplified Chinese合剌
Wanyan Dan
Traditional Chinese完顏亶
Simplified Chinese完颜亶

Early life

Hela was the eldest son of Shengguo (繩果; also known as Wanyan Zongjun 完顏宗峻), the eldest son of Aguda (Emperor Taizu), the founder and first emperor of the Jin dynasty. His mother was Lady Pucha (蒲察氏), whom he posthumously honoured as "Empress Huizhao" (惠昭皇后). When Emperor Taizu died in 1123, the throne was passed on to his younger brother, Wuqimai (Emperor Taizong). Wanyan Zonghan and Wanyan Xiyin, who used to be Emperor Taizu's chief advisers, convinced Emperor Taizong to designate Hela as his heir apparent (anban bojilie; 諳班勃極烈) in 1132, so Hela became the new emperor in 1135 when Emperor Taizong died.[1]

Wars against the Southern Song dynasty

In 1137, Emperor Xizong abolished the Qi kingdom, a vassal state of the Jin dynasty ruled by Liu Yu (劉豫), a former Song dynasty official. The Jin dynasty started peace negotiations with the Southern Song dynasty. In 1139, the Jin and Song dynasties arrived at a treaty, with the latter agreeing to be a tributary vassal state under the former. In return, the Jin dynasty returned control of Henan and Shaanxi provinces to the Song dynasty. However, in 1140, Emperor Xizong decided to wage war against the Song dynasty so he ordered the general Wanyan Zongbi to lead Jin forces to attack and seize back Henan and Shaanxi. In 1141, Wanyan Zongbi and his army were defeated by Song forces led by Yue Fei and Han Shizhong; the Jin dynasty agreed to negotiate for peace again with the Song dynasty.

Internal politics

Emperor Xizong was very fond of Han Chinese culture because of the influence of his adoptive father, Wanyan Zonggan (完顏宗幹), so he reformed the political institutions and modelled them after Han Chinese ones, while at the same time encouraging talented Han Chinese to serve in his government. In 1136, Emperor Xizong ordered Wanyan Zonggan, Wanyan Zongpan (完顏宗磐) and Wanyan Zonghan to take charge of reforming the government and creating the Three Departments system.

Emperor Xizong abolished the traditional bojilie (勃極烈) system that he inherited from his predecessors. The bojilie system allowed the Jurchen ruler to choose an heir apparent from among male relatives in the same generation as him, usually his brothers. However, Emperor Taizong, who succeeded his brother Emperor Taizu, made an exception when he chose Emperor Xizong (Emperor Taizu's grandson) as his heir apparent instead of choosing from among his sons. Wanyan Zongpan, the eldest son of Emperor Taizong, was very unhappy when the bojilie system was abolished because this meant that he would have no chance to become emperor.

Between 1138 and 1139, Wanyan Zongpan tried to seize power and start a rebellion but was defeated and executed. Since then, the political arena was dominated by Wanyan Zonghan, Wanyan Zonggan and Wanyan Zongbi; Emperor Xizong had little or no say in politics. After Wanyan Zongbi died in 1148, Emperor Xizong gained an opportunity to participate in politics, but his wife, Lady Peiman (Empress Daoping), started to interfere in politics. Emperor Xizong's two sons, Wanyan Ji'an (完顏濟安) and Wanyan Daoji (完顏道濟), died in 1143 and 1144 respectively. Emperor Xizong felt depressed by the loss of his sons that he developed an addiction to alcohol and started neglecting state affairs. He also became more violent and ruthless, and started killing people indiscriminately. One of his victims was Ambaghai, a Mongol chieftain and great-granduncle of Genghis Khan.

Emperor Xizong was overthrown and murdered by his chancellor, Digunai, and other court officials in a coup d'état on 9 January 1150.[2]

Family

  • Father: Shengguo (繩果), sinicised name Wanyan Zongjun (完顏宗峻), posthumously honoured as Emperor Huizong (金徽宗)
  • Mother: Lady Pucha (蒲察氏), posthumously honoured as Empress Huizhao 惠昭皇后)
  • Spouse: Lady Peiman (裴滿氏), posthumously honoured as Empress Daoping (悼平皇后), bore Wanyan Ji'an
  • Concubines:
    • Samao (撒卯), widow of Emperor Xizong's younger brother Wanyan Yuan (完顏元)
    • Consort Xian (賢妃), bore Wanyan Daoji
    • Consort De (德妃), also known as Lady Wugulun (烏古論氏)
    • Lady Jiagu (夾谷氏)
    • Lady Zhang (張氏)
    • Lady Peiman (裴滿氏)
    • Zhao Jingu (趙金姑), Lady Qingfu (慶福帝姬), 12th daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Saiyue (趙賽月), Lady Huafu (華福帝姬), 19th daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Feiyan (趙飛燕), daughter of Zhao Yu (趙俁)
    • Zhao Yuqiang (趙玉嬙), daughter of Zhao Shu (趙樞)
    • Zhao Yupan (趙玉盤), Lady Jiade (嘉德帝姬), eldest daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Jinnu (趙金奴), Lady Rongde (榮德帝姬), second daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Chuanzhu (趙串珠), Lady Ningfu (寧福帝姬), 16th daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Jinyin (趙金印), Lady Lingfu (令福帝姬), 18th daughter of Zhao Ji
    • Zhao Tanxiang (趙檀香), third daughter of Zhao Cai (趙偲)
  • Sons:
    • Wanyan Ji'an (完顏濟安), posthumously honoured as Crown Prince Yingdao (英悼太子)
    • Wanyan Daoji (完顏道濟), Prince of Wei (魏王)
  • Daughters:
    • Princess of Zheng (鄭國公主), married Pucha Dingshou (蒲察鼎壽), mother of Empress Qinhuai (欽懷皇后; Emperor Zhangzong's empress consort)
    • Princess of Ji (冀國公主), adoptive mother of Empress Qinhuai
    • Princess of Dai (代國公主), married Tangkuo Bian (唐括辯)
    • Daughter, name unknown, mother of Tushan Gongbi (徒單公弼)
    • Princess Supreme[3] of Liang (梁國大長公主)
    • Princess of Shen (沈國公主), married Tushan Yi (徒單繹)
gollark: JSON and CBOR and whatnot are good formats for structured data, and you can parse those easily into structured data in your language of choice with about a gazillion tools (there's even `jq` for shell scripting!), and exchange them nicely over HTTP/TCP/whatever networking thing.
gollark: Which tends to be made up ad-hoc and be some terrible hard to parse thing.
gollark: If you want to translate structured data, which is what programs mostly operate on, into plaintext, you need some other format on top of that.
gollark: No, it's not, it's an... encoding, I guess.
gollark: Just because Unix does things doesn't make those things sensible.

References

  1. Tao (1976), p. 37
  2. Robert Hymes (2000). John Stewart Bowman (ed.). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Columbia University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-231-11004-4.
  3. Lee, Lily; Wiles, Sue, eds. (2015). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women. II. Routledge. p. 609. ISBN 978-1-317-51562-3. An emperor's [...] sister or a favorite daughter was called a grand princess (zhang gongzhu); and his aunt or grand-aunt was called a princess supreme (dazhang gongzhu).
  • Jing-shen Tao, "The Jurchen in Twelfth-Century China". University of Washington Press, 1976, ISBN 0-295-95514-7.
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