| Han Xiandi (漢獻帝) | |
|---|---|
| Family name: | Liu (劉; liú) |
| Given name: | Xie (協, xíe) |
| Posthumous name: | Xiaoxian (孝獻, xiào xiàn) literary meaning: "filial and wise" |
| Posthumous name: | Xian (獻, xìan) "wise" |
Emperor Xiàn of Han, trad. ch. 漢獻帝;, sim. ch. 汉献帝;, py. hàn xiàn dì, wg. Han Hsien-ti, (181-234, r. 189-220) was last emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty. He abdicated in favor of Cao Pi and was given the title of Duke of Shanyang ("Shanyang gong").
Emperor Xiàn was the son of Emperor Ling and was the brother of Emperor Liu Bian (who later became known as Prince of Hongnong). He was placed on the throne in 189 after Dǒng Zhuō removed his brother from the throne. This act was seen as a sign to all the other lords that Dǒng was in full control of the empire. However, after Dǒng Zhuō was assassinated in 192, Emperor Xiàn became first a puppet and then was stranded in Luoyang with the warlords formally acknowledging him but giving him no aid. Eventually, Emperor Xiàn came under the control of Cao Cao in 196, and Cao used Emperor Xiàn as a titular ruler effectively, issuing edicts beneficial to him in Emperor Xiàn's name, greatly helping him in his quest to reunify the empire, which appeared inevitable until Cao's defeat by Sun Quan at the Battle of Chibi, leading to Sun and Liu Bei's entrenchment in their territories. In 220, the Han dynasty was finally overthrown by Cao Cao's son Cao Pi, ending more than 400 years of Han dynastic rule and ushering in the era of the Three Kingdoms.
Although Emperor Xiàn was demoted to a rank of nobility (Duke of Shanyang), he lived in comfort and enjoyed preferential treatments. Emperor Xiàn died in 234, 14 years after the fall of his dynasty. He was 53.
When Emperor Ling died in 189, a powerful eunuch that he trusted, Jian Shuo, wanted to first kill Empress He's brother He Jin and then make Prince Xie emperor, and therefore set up a trap at a meeting he was to have with He. He found out, and preemptorily declared Prince Bian emperor. Later that year, the young emperor created Prince Xie the Prince of Bohai, and later changed his title to the Prince of Chenliu.
He Jin's plan was discovered by the eunuchs, who lay a trap for him and killed him. Yuan then led his forces into the palace and killed the majority of the eunuchs. The remaining eunuchs initially took the young emperor and Prince Xie hostage, but eventually were forced to commit suicide when the battle turned against them. When Dong then arrived on scene, he, impressed with his own power and unimpressed with the nervous young emperor, forced the young emperor to yield the throne to Prince Xie (partly because he was raised Empress Dowager Dong who, while no relation to Dong Zhuo, was therefore respected by Dong Zhuo), who then ascended the throne as Emperor Xian. Dong Zhuo then murdered Empress Dowager He and the young former emperor, and became firmly in control of the political scene.
Later that year, a number of officials, led by Wang Yun and Dong's adopted son Lü Bu, assassinated Dong. For a while, it appeared that the Han regime might return to normal, as Wang quickly established relatlvely friendly relations with the local officials resisting Dong but by this time acting more as local warlords. However, due to Wang's failure to pacify Dong's former subordinates, they rose in revolt and killed Wang. Any possibility of return to normality was shattered.
Cao then began to issue imperial edicts in Emperor Xiàn's name -- including a harshly-worded edict condemning Yuan Shao for taking over nearby provinces -- even though it still bestowed Yuan with the highly honorific post of commander of the armed forces as well as a march. Yuan and the other warlords finally saw Cáo's advantage of having control of the emperor, but it was too late. Cao would not, for the rest of his life, let Emperor Xiàn out of his grip. Cao and Emperor Xiàn had a superficially cordial relationship, but this did not prevent two major confrontations involving Cao and other figures of the imperial court.
In or before 199, as Cao was facing a major military confrontation against Yuan, Dong Cheng claimed to have received a secret edict issued by Emperor Xiàn (hidden in a belt), and he entered into a conspiracy with Liu Bei, Zhong Ji (种輯), and Wang Fu (王服) to assassinate Cao. Late in 199, Liu started a rebellion and waited for Dong to act in the capital, but in 200, Dong's conspiracy was discovered, and he, along with Zhong and Wang, were killed. Liu was later defeated by Cao and forced to flee to Yuan's camp. Dong's daughter, an imperial consort, was pregnant, and Emperor Xiàn personally tried to intercede for her, but Cao had her executed anyway. This would precipitate the next major incident.
Emperor Xiàn's wife, Empress Fu Shou, angry and fearful about how Consort Dong died, wrote her father Fu Wan (伏完) a letter accusing Cao of cruelty, and implicitly asking Fu to start a new conspiracy against Cao. Fu Wan was fearful of Cao and never acted on the letter, in 214, her letter was discovered. Cao was extremely angry and forced Emperor Xiàn to have Empress Fu deposed. Emperor Xiàn was hesitant, and Cao sent his forces into the palace to force the issue. Empress Fu hid inside the walls, but was finally discovered and dragged out. As she was led away, she cried out to Emperor Xiàn for him to save her life, but his only response was that he could not even know what would happen to him. She was killed, along with her two sons and family. Emperor Xiàn was not, but his status as a puppet was by now fully exposed. Cao soon forced Emperor Xiàn to create his daughter Cao Jie, then an imperial consort, empress.
181 births | 234 deaths | Han Dynasty emperors | People of the Three Kingdoms
Han Xiandi | Xiandi | 献帝 (漢) | 汉献帝
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Emperor Xian of Han".
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