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Gongsun Gong of the Biography of the Three Kingdoms

author:The Autumn That Passed
Gongsun Gong of the Biography of the Three Kingdoms

Gongsun Gong (year of birth and death unknown)

Gongsun Gong (born and died unknown), Xiangping of Liaodong (present-day Liaoyang, Liaodong), a figure of the late Han Dynasty and the beginning of the Wei Dynasty, a Taishou of Liaodong, and a general of cheqi. Gongsun Du's second son, Gongsun Kang's younger brother, died, and Zi Kang took the throne, giving the false title of Marquis of Yongning to his younger brother Gongsun Gong. After Gongsun Kang's death, his sons Gongsun Huang and Gongsun Yuan were still young, so the people elected Gongsun Gong as the Taishou of Liaodong. Emperor Wen of Wei's Cao Pi was the future, and his envoys, gongsun Gong, were made generals of the Che Riders, false festivals, and the Marquis of Pingguo. Prior to this, Gongsun Gong had severed his genital organs and became an eunuch due to a disease of the male reproductive system, and he was too weak to govern the country. In the second year of Taihe (228 AD), he was forced to abdicate by the adult Gongsun Yuan and imprisoned. In the first year of Jing's reign (238 CE), Sima Yi released Gongsun Gong, who was still imprisoned, after Xiangping had quelled Gongsun Yuan's rebellion.

When Yuan Shang and Yuan Xi, who were defeated by Cao Cao, defected to Gongsun Kang, they suggested that Gongsun Kang give Cao Cao the first rank of the two of them. At the time of Gongsun Kang's death, because Gongsun Kang's eldest son, Gongsun Huang, was still young, he served as the Taishou of Liaodong. Cao Pi was later made a cheqi general, and in 228 AD, he was stripped of his throne by Gongsun Huang's younger brother, Gongsun Yuan.

Shi lacked the ability to govern the country. Because of Gongsun Huang, he was given an official position and made him live in Luoyang.

Gongsun Gong of the Biography of the Three Kingdoms

Gongsun Gong