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Emperor Xiaohui of Han Liu Ying

author:Nineteen little students
Emperor Xiaohui of Han Liu Ying

Emperor Xiaohui of Han Liu Ying

Liu Ying (210 BC – September 26, 188 BC). The second emperor of the Western Han Dynasty, the eldest son of Emperor Liu Bang of Han Gao, his mother was Lü Yan (雉雉) after Han Gao.

In the twelfth year of Emperor Han gao (195 BC), Liu Bang died of illness, and Liu Ying successfully succeeded to the throne at the age of sixteen. Liu Ying succeeded to the throne. Lü Hou resented Liu Ruyi's mother and son and wanted to harm the two. Lü Hou first demoted Lady Qi to Yongxiang as a slave, and then sent Liu Ruyi, the King of Zhao, into Beijing with the strategy of transferring the tiger away from the mountain, and Liu Ying, knowing that his mother wanted to harm Liu Ruyi, was always on guard to protect Liu Ruyi. The two slept and ate together, and Lü Hou was unable to do so.

Liu Ying's life trajectory as emperor

In December of the first year of emperor Hui of Han (194 BC), Liu Ying went out, and his brother was distressed that he did not want to get up early, and wanted him to sleep more, leaving Liu Ruyi in the palace. As soon as Liu Ying left, Lü Hou's minions immediately reported to Lü Hou, so Lü Hou sent someone to take advantage of Liu Ruyi's opportunity to be alone in the palace at this time and poison him to death. Mrs. Qi is a man. Emperor Hui knew after seeing that it was Lady Qi, and she was seriously ill.

In the second year of Emperor Hui of Han (193 BC), Xiao He of xiangguo died, and Cao Shan succeeded him as Xiangguo, following xiao He's established regulations, continuing to recuperate and restore national strength, adhering to the "Xiao Rules Cao Sui, Rest and Recuperate". In October, Liu Fei, the King of Qi Mourning Hui, entered the imperial banquet, and drank Liu Ying to mourn King Hui as his brother, such as the etiquette of ordinary people's families, so that King Hui of Qi was seated. Lü Hou was furious and secretly ordered him to poison the wine to kill King Hui. King Hui of Mourning did not know and wanted to drink, Liu Ying, aware of what his mother had done, also got up to take wine to wish Lü Hou a happy birthday. Lü Hou saw that his plot could not be achieved, and he destroyed the poisonous wine. Although the King of Qi did not know it, he felt strange and stopped drinking. Afterwards, the King of Qi learned that he was terrified, so he had to cut off the city of Qi, Yang County, and Princess Lu Yuan to please Empress Lü.

In the spring of the third year of emperor Hui of Han (192 BC), xiongnu emissaries brought a marriage proposal letter from Mao Tedan to Empress Lü. Lü Hou was furious and summoned the emissaries to discuss beheading the Xiongnu emissaries and sending troops to attack the Xiongnu. Fan Huan boldly said that he would raise 100,000 soldiers to run rampant among the Xiongnu. The general Ji Bu of Shi wei zhonglang objected, believing that the national strength of the Han Dynasty had not yet been restored, and it was impossible to start another war with the Xiongnu, and Fan Duo lightly said that starting a war was to shake the country and should have beheaded. Lü Hou, who had calmed down, took JiBu's advice and made peace with the Xiongnu again.

In October of the fourth year of emperor Hui of Han (191 BC), Princess Liluyuan's daughter Zhang Shi was made empress. He was too young to get married. This marriage is contrary to human morality, which makes Xiaohui quite embarrassed and can never accept it. Until her death, she did not approach Empress Zhang. The Jin dynasty's "Spring Colors of the Han Palace" says that Empress Zhang died and that when the palace people were buried for it, they found that Empress Zhang was still a virgin.

In the fifth year of Emperor Hui of Han (190 BC), Cao Shan of xiangguo died.

In the seventh year of emperor Hui of Han (188 BC), Emperor Hui, who was only twenty-four years old, died.

Liu Ying and Zhang Yan did not share the same cave after death

After being emperor for 7 years, Emperor Hui died prematurely at the age of 24. After Liu Ying's death, she was buried in Anling, located in Baimiao Village, Hanjiawan Township, Weicheng District, 18 kilometers east of Xianyang City. Tomb of Liu Ying, Emperor Hui of Han. The Tomb is a bucket-shaped tomb with a base circumference of 725 meters and a height of 25.22 meters. 150 meters northwest of the mausoleum, is the tomb of Empress Zhang. After Lü Hou's death, Empress Zhang was deposed and Fengqiu was very small. There are 12 funerary tombs in The Village of Baimiao in Lingbei has the ruins of Yicheng, and there are 12 funerary tombs in the east of The Ling.

Emperor Xiaohui of Han Liu Ying

Han An Mausoleum and Empress Zhang YanLing

The situation of the heirs of Emperor Xiaohui of Han

Emperor Xiaohui of Han had six sons: Liu Gong (劉恭), former Shao Emperor Liu Gong (劉恭), Prince Liu Of Huaiyang (劉彊) the Prince of Huaiyang, Liu Bu (劉不疑) the Prince of Changshan, Liu Hong (later the Later Shao Emperor), Liu Chao (轵朝) the Marquis of Xuan, and Liu Wu (later renamed The Prince of Huaiyang).

Because two of Liu Ying's six sons were made emperors during Lü Hou's reign, the former Shao Emperor Liu Gong was later deposed and executed; the Later Shao Emperor Liu Hong reigned until Lü Hou's death, when he was deposed and executed by courtiers. Qunchen declared, "These sons of Liu Ying were not born to him, but were the bloodline of the Lü clan, and (Lü Hou) made the descendants of the Lü clan princes and princes, and the future world was actually surnamed Lü." After pacifying Zhu Lü, the Gongchen faction and the imperial family faction welcomed Liu Heng as emperor (Emperor Wen of Han), and the two factions feared that the Lü family would grow in the future, and on the night when Liu Heng entered the Weiyang Palace, they executed these descendants (who claimed that they were not of the Liu clan) in their official residences. Therefore, in the future, there was the saying that Emperor Hui was childless.

epilogue:

Xiaosheng believes that Liu Ying's situation is somewhat similar to that of the Tongzhi Emperor, who ascended the throne at a young age, whose mother took power and eventually died before her mother, and who had a low voice in the face of political rights, because their mothers liked to play with power and stood at the peak of China's power.

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