Doulouchu

Doulouchu (Chinese: 兜楼储) was a Xiongnu prince of unknown relationship to the Southern Xiongnu dynastic line who was proclaimed chanyu by the Han dynasty in 143 AD. Toulouchu resided in the Southern Xiongnu capital of Meiji in Xihe Commandery. It is doubtful whether he wielded any real power over his nominal subjects. He died four years later in 147 AD and was succeeded by Jucheer.[1] His name might come from "Dol-uk", or "full understanding" in proto-Turkic.

Doulouchu
Hulan Ruoshi Zhujiu Chanyu
Reignc.143-147 AD
PredecessorCheniu
SuccessorJucheer

Footnotes

  1. Crespigny 2007, p. 795.
gollark: To clarify, do you mean how fast you can type/read/whatever or more general stuff?
gollark: Not that I'm some sort of engineered superhuman, but still.
gollark: I generally don't find myself running at anywhere near my maximum I/O data rate.
gollark: I have heard it said that Google and such aren't that efficiently run, but just have money-printers operating somewhere.
gollark: GPUs can go up to many tens of TFLOP/s but only have a few tens of gigabytes of memory, which is 3 OOM off.

References

  • Barfield, Thomas (1989), The Perilous Frontier: Nomadic Empires and China, Basil Blackwell
  • Bichurin N.Ya., "Collection of information on peoples in Central Asia in ancient times", vol. 1, Sankt Petersburg, 1851, reprint Moscow-Leningrad, 1950
  • Chang, Chun-shu (2007), The Rise of the Chinese Empire 1, The University of Michigan Press
  • Cosmo, Nicola Di (2002), Ancient China and Its Enemies, Cambridge University Press
  • Cosmo, Nicola di (2009), Military Culture in Imperial China, Harvard University Press
  • Crespigny, Rafe de (2007), A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms, Brill
  • Loewe, Michael (2000), A Biographical Dictionary of the Qin, Former Han, and Xin Periods, Brill
  • Taskin B.S., "Materials on Sünnu history", Science, Moscow, 1968, p. 31 (In Russian)
  • Whiting, Marvin C. (2002), Imperial Chinese Military History, Writers Club Press
Preceded by
Cheniu
Chanyu of the Southern Xiongnu
143-147 AD
Succeeded by
Jucheer
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