Grand empress dowager

Grand empress dowager (also grand dowager empress or grand empress mother) (Chinese and Japanese: ; pinyin: tàihuángtàihòu; rōmaji: taikōtaigō; Korean: (太皇太后); romaja: Tae Hwang Tae Hu; Vietnamese: Thái Hoàng thái hậu) was a title given to the grandmother,[1] or a woman from the same generation, of a Chinese, Japanese and Korean emperor in East Asia, or a Vietnamese emperor in Southeast Asia.

Part of a series on
European imperial,
royal, noble, gentry and
chivalric ranks
Emperor · Empress · King-Emperor · Queen-Empress · Kaiser · Tsar
High king · High queen · Great king · Great queen
King · Queen
Archduke · Archduchess · Tsesarevich
Grand prince · Grand princess
Grand duke · Grand duchess
Prince-elector · Prince · Princess · Crown prince · Crown princess · Foreign prince · Prince du sang · Infante · Infanta · Dauphin · Dauphine · Królewicz · Królewna · Jarl
Duke · Duchess · Herzog · Knyaz · Princely count
Sovereign prince · Sovereign princess · Fürst · Fürstin · Boyar
Marquess · Marquis · Marchioness ·
Margrave · Landgrave · Marcher Lord
 · Count palatine
Count · Countess · Earl · Graf · Châtelain · Castellan · Burgrave
Viscount · Viscountess · Vidame
Baron · Baroness · Freiherr · Advocatus · Lord of Parliament · Thane · Lendmann
Baronet · Baronetess · Scottish Feudal Baron · Scottish Feudal Baroness · Ritter · Imperial Knight
Eques · Knight · Chevalier · Ridder · Lady · Dame · Edelfrei · Seigneur · Lord · Laird
Lord of the manor · Gentleman · Gentry · Esquire · Edler · Jonkheer · Junker · Younger · Maid
Ministerialis

Some grand empress dowagers held regency during the emperor's childhood. Some of the most prominent empress dowagers extended their regencies beyond the time when the emperor was old enough to govern alone. This was seen as a source of political turmoil, according to the traditional views of Chinese historians.

Chinese grand empress dowagers

Han dynasty

Cao Wei

  • Grand Empress Dowager Bian (226–230), during the reign of Emperor Ming

Jin dynasty (265–420)

Liu Song dynasty

  • Grand Empress Dowager Xiao Wenshou (422–423), during the reign of Emperor Shao
  • Grand Empress Dowager Lu Huinan (464–466), during the reign of Emperor Qianfei

Chen dynasty

  • Grand Empress Dowager Zhang Yao'er (566–568), during the reign of Emperor Fei

Northern Wei dynasty

Northern Qi dynasty

Northern Zhou dynasty

Tang dynasty

Song dynasty

  • Grand Empress Dowager Cao (1067–1085), during the reign of Emperor Shenzong
  • Grand Empress Dowager Gao Taotao (1085–1093), during the reign of Emperor Zhezong
  • Grand Empress Dowager Wu (1189–1197), during the reign of Emperor Guangzong
  • Grand Empress Dowager Xie (1194–1203), during the reign of Emperor Ningzong
  • Grand Empress Dowager Xie Daoqing (1274–1276), during the reign of Emperor Gong; the proceeding two emperors were her grandsons but they were fleeing from the Mongols

Liao dynasty

Jin dynasty (1115–1234)

  • Tangkuo, Grand Empress Dowager of Qingyuan Palace (1135–1136), during the reign of Emperor Xizong
  • Heshilie, Grand Empress Dowager of Mingde Palace (1135–1143), during the reign of Emperor Xizong

Yuan dynasty

  • Grand Empress Dowager of Dagi (1321–?), during the reign of Emperor Yingzong
  • Grand Empress Dowager Budashiri (1333–1338), during the reign of Emperor Huizong

Ming dynasty

Qing dynasty

gollark: I don't mean the same model, I mean exactly the same computer.
gollark: We even have the same computer.
gollark: It's an isomorphism, not an automorphism.
gollark: Further evidence of the LyricLy-gollark isomorphism.
gollark: You would say that.

See also

References

  1. Twitchett, Denis C.; Mote, Frederick W. (1998-01-28). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 8, The Ming Dynasty. Cambridge University Press. p. 18. ISBN 9780521243339.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.