Empress Huyan (Liu Cong's wife)

Empress Huyan (呼延皇后, personal name unknown) (died 312), formally Empress Wuyuan (武元皇后, literally "the martial and discerning empress") was an empress of the Chinese/Xiongnu state Han Zhao. She was the first wife of Liu Cong (Emperor Zhaowu).

Life

Her clan, the Huyans, were probably a noble clan of Xiongnu, as a large number of Han Zhao officials were named Huyan. She was created empress in 310 after Liu Cong seized the throne from his brother Liu He (after Liu He had tried to have him and the other brothers killed and successfully killed two). She was the cousin of the first empress of Liu Cong's father Liu Yuan. She bore Liu Cong at least one son -- Liu Can, whom Liu Cong created the Prince of He'nei and commissioned as a major general. However, he did not create Liu Can crown prince because he had promised to make Liu Ai (劉乂), son of Liu Yuan's second wife Empress Dan, who had yielded the throne to him after Liu He's death, crown prince. (He also had an affair with Liu Ai's mother Empress Dan, and this affair was part of the reason.)

When Empress Dowager Dan died in 310, Empress Huyan began to try to secure the crown prince position for her son, telling him:

"You inherited the throne from your father. What does the Crown Prince have to do with it? After you die, Liu Can and his brothers will not even get to live."

Liu Cong did not follow her suggestion at this point, but the seeds were sown, and eventually in 317, long after her death, he would depose Crown Prince Ai and make Liu Can crown prince.

Empress Huyan died in 312 and was given a posthumous name, appropriate for an empress.

gollark: Hmm, that is cat.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: * too complicated
gollark: But they changed it because they thought it would sound more complicated.
gollark: The original script had them used for computation or something.

References

    Chinese royalty
    Preceded by
    Empress Dan
    Empress of Han Zhao
    310–312
    Succeeded by
    Empress Zhang Huiguang
    Empress of China (Southern Shanxi)
    310–312
    Preceded by
    Empress Liang Lanbi of Jin
    Empress of China (Northern/Central)
    311–312
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