
Liu Qi, the Emperor of Han Jing, was the sixth emperor of the Western Han Dynasty, the fifth son of Liu Heng, emperor of the Han Dynasty, and his biological mother was Empress Xiaowen of the Dou clan.
During his reign, he carried out a policy of cutting down the domain, quelling the rebellion of the Seven Kingdoms, and strengthening the centralization of power;
Adopting national policies such as resting with the people, reducing taxes, and persuading farmers to do so, the country maintained a prosperous situation.
Emperor Jing of Han reigned for sixteen years, and during the reign of his father Liu Heng, he was collectively known as the "Rule of Wenjing".
In the third year of the Later Yuan Dynasty (141 BC), The Han Jing Emperor Liu Qi died of illness at the age of forty-eight, and was succeeded by his tenth son, Liu Che, as Emperor Wu of Han.
Emperor Jing of Han and his empress dowagers and his wife had fourteen sons—Liu Rong, the eldest son of the Emperor, Liu De, the second son of the Emperor, Liu Fuyu, the third son of the Emperor, Liu Yu, the fourth son of the Emperor, Liu Fei, the fifth son of the Emperor, Liu Fa, the sixth son of the Emperor, Liu Pengzu, the seventh son of the Emperor, Liu Duan, the eighth son of the Emperor, Liu Sheng, the ninth son of the Emperor, Liu Che, the eleventh son of the Emperor, Liu Yue, the eleventh son of the Emperor, Liu Yu, the twelfth son of the Emperor, Liu Cheng, the thirteenth son of the Emperor, and Liu Shun, the fourteenth son of the Emperor.
These princes gave birth to a large number of imperial grandchildren, and it is worth mentioning that the ninth son of the emperor, Liu Sheng, the King of Zhongshan Jing, gave birth to more than one hundred and twenty sons.
Liu Bei, the Emperor Zhaolie of the Shu Han Dynasty, also claimed to be a descendant of Liu Sheng.
Emperor Wu of han Liu Che
Emperor Liu Che of the Han Dynasty had six sons and six daughters, and his concubines and descendants continued until the Han widow Liu Bao.
Wang Mang usurped the Western Han Dynasty, proclaimed himself emperor, and established a new dynasty.
Liu Fa, the sixth son of the Han Jing Emperor, although not well-known in history, but his fifth grandson appeared two famous figures, one was the first emperor Liu Xuan, and the other was Liu Xiu, the Guangwu Emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty.
Emperor Liu Xiu of Han Guangwu
The emperors of the Western Han Dynasty after Liu Che, including the emperors of the Eastern Han Dynasty and the emperors of the Shu Han Dynasty in the Three Kingdoms, were all descendants of Liu Qi, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty, and their genes were strong, which can be seen.