laitimes

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

author:The Prince of History

Eldest son: Prince Xuan, Sun Deng

Sun Deng (209–241), high character. A native of Fuchun, Wu Commandery (present-day Fuyang, Zhejiang). During the Three Kingdoms period, Sun Wu was the eldest son of Sun Quan the Great, the half-brother of Sun Liang the Prince of Huiji and Sun Xiu of the Jing Emperor.

In the first year of Huanglong (229), Sun Quan was proclaimed emperor and Sun Deng was made crown prince. He advised Sun Quan many times and had a lot of advice on current politics. When the town guarded Wuchang, it handled government affairs cautiously and appropriately. In the first year of Jiahe (232), he also lived in Jianye.

In the fourth year of Chiwu (241), Sun Deng died at the age of thirty-three, and his title was Prince Xuan. On his deathbed, shangshu recommended talents. Sun Quan was deeply saddened, and after that, he cried as long as he talked about Sun Deng.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Second son: Marquis Sun of Jianchang

Sun Wei (213–232), courtesy name Zizhi, second son of Emperor Wu's Grandson Quan, birth mother unknown, Eastern Wu Sect of the Three Kingdoms.

Sun Wei was intelligent and versatile since childhood, and was deeply loved by Sun Quanji. In the seventh year of Huang Wu (228), he was a feudal Marquis of Chang. Later, he served as a general in the Zhen Army, stationed in Banzhou (半州, in modern Jiujiang, Jiangxi). When Sun Wei served in Banzhou, he obeyed the law and served his teachers and friends, exceeding the expectations of the people. In the first year of Jiahe (232), Sun Wei died at the age of twenty.

Third son: Emperor Wen of Wu (posthumously) Sun He

Sun He (224–253), courtesy name Zixiao, was a native of Fuchun, Wu Commandery (present-day Fuyang District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang). During the Three Kingdoms period, emperor Wu guozong was the third son of Emperor Sun Quan, the biological father of the last emperor Sun Hao, and his mother was Empress Dayi Wang.

He loves literature, is good at riding and shooting, is deeply loved by Sun Quan, and is made a prince. In the Southern Lu Party Struggle, he was framed by Sun Ba, the King of Lu, and Princess Quan, and gradually lost his position. In the thirteenth year of Chiwu (250), he was demoted to the position of King Of Zhang, and then the King of Nanyang, and was placed in Changsha.

In the second year of Jianxing (253), it was rumored that he was greeted by The Great Fu Zhuge Ke and sat on the sin and gave death. The eldest son, Sun Hao, ascended the throne and was posthumously honored as Emperor Wen.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Fourth son: Sun Ba, King of Lu

Sun Ba(?) ~250), courtesy name Ziwei, was a native of Fuchun, Wu Commandery (present-day Fuyang District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang). During the Three Kingdoms period, Emperor Wu was the fourth son of Emperor Sun Quan.

In the fifth year of Chiwu (242 AD), he was crowned king of Lu. Quite favored, comparable to the prince and grandson, he had the heart to seize the concubines and contend for the throne, and befriended the chancellor and the princess to frame the prince, causing turmoil in the government and the opposition, known in history as the "Nanlu Dispute".

In the thirteenth year (250), Chi Wu tried to endanger the prince and sat on the sin and gave death.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Fifth son: Sun Fen, King of Qi

Sun Fen(?) –270), courtesy name Ziyang (mistakenly recorded as Ziyang in the Tang Dynasty Records of Jiankang), was the fifth son of Emperor Wu's grandson Sun Quan, his mother Zhongji, and his wife Yuan Shi (袁術) was a granddaughter of Yuan Shu (Yuan Yao's daughter). During the Three Kingdoms period, Emperor Wu and Emperor Wu, the first Prince of Qi, was deposed as a Shuren (庶人) for killing officials of the feudal state without authorization, and later changed his title to Marquis Of'an.

In the second year of Jianheng (270), Sun Fen and his descendants were all killed by Sun Hao.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Sixth son: Emperor Jing of Wu

Sun Xiu (235 – September 3, 264), courtesy name Zilie, was a native of Fuchun County, Wu Commandery (present-day Fuyang District, Zhejiang), son of Sun Quan the Great, and the third emperor of Eastern Wu (November 30, 258 – September 3, 264).

When Sun Xiu was eighteen years old, he was crowned the King of Langya, and in the third year of Taiping (258), Sun Xiu launched a coup d'état, deposing Sun Liang as the Prince of Huiji, and welcoming Sun Xiu as emperor. Sun Xiu ascended the throne, made Sun Qiu a chancellor, sun Qiuquan fell to the opposition, and Sun Xiu conspired with Zhang Bu and Ding Feng to remove Sun Xiu. During Sun Xiu's reign, he promulgated a good system to benefit the people and promote the prosperity of Eastern Wu. Sun XiuHaowen, after taking the throne, founded the Guoxue in the first year of Yong'an, set up the Taixue doctorate system, and established the Doctor of the Five Classics, which was the abuse of Nanjing Taixue, and Wei Zhao was the first doctor to offer wine.

In the seventh year of Yong'an (264), Sun Xiu died, and was buried in Dingling.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Seventh son: Sun Liang, the Prince of Wuhui

Sun Liang (243–260), courtesy name Ziming, was a native of Fuchun County, Wu Commandery (present-day Fuyang District, Zhejiang), son of Sun Quan the Great, and the second emperor of Eastern Wu (23 May 252 – 9 November 258).

In the first year of Jianxing (252), he ascended the throne as emperor at the age of ten, and in the second year of Taiping (257), he was officially pro-government at the age of fifteen, and a year later (258), he was deposed by the powerful minister Sun Qi as the Prince of Huiji.

In the third year of Yong'an (260), Sun Liang was demoted to the rank of Marquis-in-waiting, committed suicide on his way to the fiefdom (it is said that he was poisoned), and died at the age of 18. During the Taikang period of the Western Jin Dynasty, Dai Xian, an official who had previously served in Eastern Wu, buried Sun Liang's remains in Laixiang.

The children of Emperor Wu's Sun Quan

Read on