Later Liang
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| This article is part of the Sixteen Kingdoms series.
|
|---|
| 16 Kingdoms
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| Cheng Han
|
| Han Zhao
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| Later Zhao
|
| Former Liang
|
| Later Liang
|
| Western Liang
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| Northern Liang
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| Southern Liang
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| Former Qin
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| Later Qin
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| Western Qin
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| Former Yan
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| Later Yan
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| Northern Yan
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| Southern Yan
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| Xia
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| Not included in the 16 Kingdoms
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| Ran Wei
|
| Western Shu
|
| Western Yan
|
| Duan
|
| Yuwen
|
| Chouchi
|
| Wei (Dingling)
|
| Dai |
The Later Liang (Simplified Chinese: }}}; Traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: ; 386-403) was a state of the Sixteen Kingdoms during the Jin Dynasty (265-420) in China. It was founded by the Lü family of the Di ethnicity.
All rulers of the Later Liang proclaimed themselves "Heavenly Prince" (Tian Wang).
Rulers of the Later Liang
| 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 | ||||
| Taizu (太祖 Tàizǔ) | Yiwu (懿武 Yìwǔ) | Lü Guang (呂光 Lǚ Guāng) | 386-400 | Taian (太安 Tàiān) 386-389Lunjia (麟嘉 Lúnjiā) 389-396 |
| Did not exist | Yin (隱 Yǐn) | Lü Shao (呂紹 Lǚ Shào) | 400 | Longfei (龍飛 Lóngfēi) 399 |
| Did not exist | Ling (靈 Líng) | Lü Zuan (呂纂 Lǚ Zuǎn) | 400-401 | Xianning (咸寧 Xiánníng) 400-401 |
| Did not exist | Shangshu Gong (尚書公 Shàngshū Gōng) or Jiankang Gong (建康公 Jiànkāng Gōng) | Lü Long (呂隆 Lǚ Lóng) | 401-403 | Shending (神鼎 Shéndǐng) 401-403 |
See also
- Di
- List of past Chinese ethnic groups
- Wu Hu
- Sixteen Kingdoms
- Buddhism in China
- Kumarajiva
- Gansu
- Dunhuang
- Memoirs of Eminent Monks
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