Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Cheng Han

Encyclopedia : C : CH : CHE : Cheng Han


This article is part of
the Sixteen Kingdoms
series.

16 Kingdoms

Cheng Han

Han Zhao

Later Zhao

Former Liang

Later Liang

Western Liang

Northern Liang

Southern Liang

Former Qin

Later Qin

Western Qin

Former Yan

Later Yan

Northern Yan

Southern Yan

Xia

Not included
in the 16 Kingdoms

Ran Wei

Western Shu

Western Yan

Duan

Yuwen

Chouchi

Wei (Dingling)

Dai
This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]

The Cheng Han (Simplified Chinese: }}}; Traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: ; 303 or 304-347) was a state of the Sixteen Kingdoms during the Jin Dynasty (265-420) in China. It represented two states, the Cheng state (成, pinyin Chéng) proclaimed in 304 by Li Xiong and the Han state (汉, pinyin Hàn) in 338 by Li Shou. Since they were both ruled by the Li family of the Di ethnicity, scholars with Chinese backgrounds often combined them into a single Cheng Han state. Western texts frequently referred to the two states separately. Whether the treatment is correct is debatable -- when Li Shou claimed the throne in 338, he did not acknowledge his throne as having been inherited from Li Xiong's line, and indeed, while continuing the worship of Li Xiong, maintained it in a separate temple. Li Shou's son Li Shi, however, acknowledged the prior emperors as his predecessors. Chenghan was the earliest establishment of the kingdoms.

All rulers of the Cheng Han declared themselves "emperors".

The commonly accepted founding year of Cheng has been 304. Nevertheless Li Te declared a new era name in 303 and self-declaration of era name has been considered by some Chinese scholars to be a symbol of a new government. At that time, however, Li Te claimed no imperial or other special titles for himself.

Rulers of the Cheng Han

Temple names Posthumous names Family names and given name Durations of reigns Era names and their according durations
Chinese convention: use family and given names
Cheng 303 or 304-338
Shizu (始祖 pinyin Shǐzǔ) or Shizu (世祖 Shìzǔ) Jing (景 Jǐng) Li Te (李特 Lǐ Tè) 303 Jianchu (建初 Jiànchū) or Jingchu (景初 Jǐngchū) 303
Did not exist Did not exist Li Liu (李流 Lǐ Liú) several months in 303 Did not exist
Taizong (太宗 Tàizōng) Wu (武 Wǔ) Li Xiong (李雄 Lǐ Xióng) 303-334 Jianxing (建興 Jiànxīng) 304-306
Yanping (晏平 Yànpíng) 306-311
Yuheng (玉衡 Yùhéng) 311-334
Did not exist Ai (哀 āi) Li Ban (李班 Lǐ Bān) 7 months in 334 Yuheng (玉衡 Yùhéng) 7 months in 334
Did not exist Yougong (幽公 Yōugōng) Li Qi (李期 Lǐ Qī) 334-338 Yuheng (玉恆 Yùhéng) 335-338
Han 338-347
Zhongzong (中宗 zhōngzōng) Zhaowen (昭文 Zhāowén) Li Shou (李壽 Lǐ Shòu) 338-343 Hanxing (漢興 Hànxīng) 338-343
Did not exist Guiyihou (歸義侯 Guīyìhóu) Li Shi (李勢 Lǐ Shì) 343-347 Taihe (太和 Tàihé) 343-346
Jianing (嘉寧 Jiàníng) 346-347

See also

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: