History:Cheng-Han
Cheng-Han (成漢) 成 (304–338), 漢 (338–347) | |||||||||
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304–347 | |||||||||
Cheng-Han (Cheng) in southwestern China | |||||||||
Capital | Chengdu | ||||||||
Common languages | Ba–Shu Chinese | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
Emperor | |||||||||
• 304–334 | Li Xiong | ||||||||
• 334 | Li Ban | ||||||||
• 334–338 | Li Qi | ||||||||
• 338–343 | Li Shou | ||||||||
• 343–347 | Li Shi | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Li Te's proclamation of era name "Jianchu" (建初) | 303 | ||||||||
• Li Xiong's claim of princely title | 304 | ||||||||
• Li Xiong's claim of imperial title | 306 | ||||||||
• Name change to Han | 338 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 347 | ||||||||
• Li Shi's death | 361 | ||||||||
Currency | Chinese cash coins (Ancient Chinese coinage) | ||||||||
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Today part of | China |
Cheng-Han (simplified Chinese: 成汉; traditional Chinese: 成漢; pinyin: Chénghàn; 303 or 304 – 347) was a dynastic state of China listed as one of the Sixteen Kingdoms in Chinese historiography. Ruled by the Ba-Di people, its territory was based in what is modern-day Sichuan Province, China.
Cheng and Han
It represented two states, the Cheng state (成 Chéng) and the Han state (漢 Hàn). Cheng was proclaimed in 304 by Li Xiong, while Han was proclaimed in 338 by Li Shou. Since they were both ruled by the Li family,[1] scholars often combine them into a single Cheng-Han state in historiography. The Li family has also been described as being of Ba-Di ethnicity, as they were originally Cong people of Ba from modern Sichuan who had settled among the Di in modern Gansu.[2] Western texts frequently referred to the two states separately. Whether the treatment is correct is debatable.
When Li Shou claimed the throne in 338, he did not acknowledge his throne as having been inherited from Li Xiong's line. While he continued to worship Li Xiong, it was done in a separate temple. However, Li Shou's son Li Shi, acknowledged the prior emperors including Li Xiong as his predecessors. Cheng-Han was the earliest establishment of the Sixteen Kingdoms.
All rulers of the Cheng-Han declared themselves "emperors".
The commonly accepted founding year of Cheng has been 304. Nevertheless, Li Te declared a new era name in 303. Some scholars consider this self-declaration of era name to be a symbol of a new government. However, at that time, Li Te claimed no imperial or other special titles for himself.[citation needed]
The Cheng-Han was eventually conquered by the Jin when Huan Wen attacked Chengdu.
Rulers of Cheng-Han
Temple name | Posthumous name | Personal name | Durations of reign | Era names |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cheng 303 or 304 – 338 | ||||
Shizu | Jing | Li Te | 303 | Jianchu (建初) or Jingchu (景初) 303 |
– | – | Li Liu | 303 | – |
Taizong | Wu | Li Xiong | 303–334 | Jianxing (建興) 304–306 Yanping (晏平) 306–311 Yuheng (玉衡) 311–334 |
– | – | Li Ban | 334 | Yuheng (玉衡) 334 |
– | – | Li Qi | 334–338 | Yuheng (玉恆) 335–338 |
Han 338–347 | ||||
Zhongzong | Zhaowen | Li Shou | 338–343 | Hanxing (漢興) 338–343 |
– | – | Li Shi | 343–347 | Taihe (太和) 343–346 Jianing (嘉寧) 346–347 |
Family tree
See also
- Ba
- Di (Wu Hu)
- List of past Chinese ethnic groups
- Wu Hu
- Sixteen Kingdoms
- Huan Wen
- Sichuan
- Eight Immortals from Sichuan
References
Citations
Sources
- Kleeman, Terry F., Great Perfection: Religion and Ethnicity in a Chinese Millennial Kingdom, ISBN:0-8248-1800-8.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheng-Han.
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