laitimes

Who is Li Shi's father Li Shi's father Li Shou biography

author:Interesting history

Li Shi (?-361), ziren, the eldest son of Emperor Zhaowen of Chenghan, and his mother Li Shi, was the last emperor of Chenghan during the Sixteen Kingdoms period, reigning from 343 to 347. In 343, Li Shou died, and Li Shi took the throne and changed his name to Yuan Taihe. During Li Shi's reign, he was arrogant and miserly, greedy for money and lustful, killing people and taking wives, ignoring state affairs, mutilating ministers, and abusing the criminal law. In 347, Sima Huanwen of the Eastern Jin Dynasty led an army against Li Shi, and Li Shi's army was defeated and surrendered, and Cheng Han perished. Huan Wen moved Li Shi and more than a dozen of his relatives to the Jin capital Jiankang (present-day Nanjing, Jiangsu) and made Li Shi the Marquis of Guiyi.

In 361 (the fifth year of Shengping), Li Shi died in Jiankang (present-day Nanjing, Jiangsu).

Who is Li Shi's father

Father: Li Shou, Emperor Zhaowen of the Chenghan Dynasty

Who is Li Shi's father Li Shi's father Li Shou biography

A brief biography of Li Shi's father, Li Shou

Li Shentong (577–630), real name Shou (寿), courtesy name Shentong, was the grandson of Li Hu, one of the Eight Pillar States of Western Wei and Northern Zhou, the eldest son of Li Liang, the assassin of Haizhou in the Sui Dynasty, the cousin of Li Yuan of The Tang Dynasty, and a tang dynasty patriarch and general.

In the thirteenth year of Daye (617), Tang Gaozu raised an army in Taiyuan, and Li Shentong, Liu Chongli and others raised troops in response, claiming to be the commander-in-chief of the Guanzhong Road march, and Tang Gaozu appointed him as the Grand Master of Guanglu. After conquering Chang'an, he worshiped Zong Zhengqing.

In the first year of Wu De (618), Tang Gaozu established the Tang Dynasty and appointed Li Shentong as the Great General of Right Yiwei, the Prince of Yongkang, and soon changed his title to the King of Huai'an, serving as the ambassador of Shandong Province. In the fourth year of Wu De (621), he was appointed as the left servant of Hebei Xingtai. In the fifth year of Wu De (622), he accompanied the army to pacify Liu Heimin and was promoted to the rank of general of Zuo Wuwei. After Emperor Taizong of Tang ascended the throne, Li Shimin took the throne as the Kaifu Yi Tongsan Division, and gave him five hundred households. In the fourth year of Zhenguan (630), Li Shentong died and was posthumously awarded the title of Sikong (司空).

Read on