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Empress Wu

Empress Wu: Encyclopedia - Empress Wu

(新唐書), compiled in 1045-1060, which is the year favored by modern historians. The year of birth deducted from the Book of Tang (舊唐書), compiled in 941-945, is 623. The year of birth deducted from the Comprehensive Mirror compiled in 1065-84, is 624. 2. Was given this name by Emperor Taizong in the late 630s after she had entered the imperial palace (see inside article). 3. Had this Chinese character created in December 689 and ...

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Empress Wu, Empress Wu - Zhou Dynasty 690 - 705, Chinese sovereign, Chinese characters of Empress Wu, Tang Dynasty, Princess Taiping

Empress Wu: Encyclopedia - Empress Wu



Empress Wu

(新唐書), compiled in 1045-1060, which
is the year favored by modern historians. The year of birth
deducted from the Book of Tang
(舊唐書), compiled in
941-945, is 623. The year of birth deducted from the
Comprehensive Mirror
compiled in 1065-84, is 624.
2. Was given this name by Emperor Taizong in the late 630s
after she had entered the imperial palace (see inside article).
3. Had this Chinese character created in December 689 and
chose it as her given name. Became her taboo name when she
ascended the throne the next year. Some sources assert that
this character was actually written 瞾 . Some sources also
assert that her original given name was Zhao (照) , and that
in 689 she only changed the character to write her name, but
this is confirmed neither by the Book of Tang, nor by the
New Book of Tang, which both do not record her original
given name, if she had any.
4. Was already partially in control of power since around
660, and totally since January 665 (see inside article). Zhou
dynasty was proclaimed on October 16, 690, and she
proclaimed herself emperor on October 19, demoting her
younger son Emperor Ruizong to the rank of imperial heir.
5. Lost power at the palace coup of February 20, 705. Then
on February 22 was forced to transfer the imperial dignity
onto her older son, restored as Emperor Zhongzong
on February 23
6. Zhou dynasty was abolished before her death, and she
was reverted to the rank of empress consort on her death, so
that she does not have a temple name. In China, empresses
consort, unlike ruling emperors, are not given a temple name.
7. Zetian was the beginning of the honorific name (徽號)
given to her in February 705 by her son the restored emperor
Zhongzong. The honorific name was used as her posthumous
name when she died ten months later.
8. Final version of her posthumous name as given in July 749.

Wu Zetian (武則天) (625 - December 16, 705), personal name Wu Zhao (武曌), was the only female emperor in the history of China, founding her own dynasty, the Zhou (周), and ruling under the name Emperor Shengshen (聖神皇帝) from 690 to 705. Her rise and reign has been criticized harshly by Confucian historians but has been viewed under a different light after the 1950s.

Her family was from Wenshui (文水), part of Bingzhou (幷州) prefecture (now called Taiyuan in Shanxi province). Wenshui is now a county (文水县) inside Lüliang prefecture (吕梁地区) and located 80 km.(50 miles) southwest of Taiyuan. Her father was Wu Shihuo (武士彠) (577-635), a member of a renowned aristocratic family of Shanxi, and an ally of Li Yuan, the founder of the Tang Dynasty, in his conquest of power (Li Yuan was himself from a renowned aristocratic family of Shanxi). Her mother was Lady Yang (楊氏) (579-670), a woman from the Sui imperial family. Wu Zetian was not born in Wenshui, as her father was a high ranking civil servant serving in various posts and locations along his life. The most serious claimant for her birth place is Lizhou (利州) prefecture, now the prefecture-level city of Guangyuan (广元市), in the north of Sichuan province, some 800 km.(500 miles) southwest of Wenshui, but other places have been proposed, including the capital Chang'an.

She entered Emperor Taizong's harem most probably in 638 (other possible date: 636), and was made a cairen (才人), i.e. one of the nine concubines of the fifth rank. Emperor Taizong gave her the name Mei (媚), meaning "charming, beautiful", and the young empress is generally known inside China as Wu Meiniang (武媚娘, i.e. "Miss Wu Mei").

In 649, Taizong died, and as was customary for concubines Wu Meiniang had to leave the imperial palace and enter a Buddhist nunnery where she had her hair shaved. Not long afterwards, most probably in 651, she was reintegrated into the imperial palace by Emperor Gaozong, son of Taizong, who had been struck by her beauty while visiting and worshipping in the nunnery. Gaozong's empress consort, from the Wang (王) family, played a key role in the reintegration of Wu Meiniang in the imperial palace. The emperor at the time was greatly attached to a concubine from the Xiao (蕭) family, and the empress hoped that the arrival of a new beautiful concubine would divert the emperor from the concubine née Xiao. Modern historians dispute this traditional history, and some think that the young Wu Zetian never actually left the imperial palace, and that she was probably already having an affair with the crown prince (who became Emperor Gaozong) while Emperor Taizong was still alive. Wherever the truth lies, it remains certain that by the early 650s Wu Zetian was a concubine of Emperor Gaozong, and she was titled zhaoyi (昭儀), i.e. the highest ranking of the nine concubines of the second rank. The fact that the emperor had taken one of the concubines of his father as a concubine, and what's more a nun if traditional history is to be believed, was found utterly shocking by Confucian moralists.

Wu Zetian soon revealed her talent at manipulation and intrigue. She first had the concubine née Xiao out of the way, and then her next target was the empress consort herself. In the year 654, Wu Zetian's baby child was killed, Empress Wang was identified as the murderer and was then persecuted. It is still a mystery what really happened in the day the murder took place. Legend has it that Wu Zetian actually killed her own daughter, but the allegation was possibly made up by her opponents and Confucian historians. Soon after that, she succeeded in having the emperor creating for her the extraordinary title of chenfei (宸妃), which was ranking her above the four concubines of the first rank and immediately below the empress consort. Then eventually, in November 655, the empress née Wang was demoted and Wu Zetian was made empress consort. Wu later had Wang and Xiao executed in a cruel manner -- their arms and legs were battered and broken, and then they were put in large wine urns and left to die after several days of agony.

After Gaozong started to suffer from strokes from November 660, she began to govern China from behind the scenes. She was even more in absolute control of power after she had Shangguan Yi (上官儀) and Li Zhong (李忠) executed in January 665, and henceforth she sat behind to the now silent emperor during court audiences (most probably, she sat behind a screen at the rear of the throne) and took decisions. She reigned in his name and then after his death in the name of subsequent puppet emperors (her son Emperor Zhongzong and then her younger son Emperor Ruizong), only assuming power herself in October 690, when she declared the Zhou Dynasty, named after her father's nominal posthumous fief as well as in reference to the illustrious Zhou Dynasty of Chinese Antiquity from which she claimed the Wu family was descended. In December 689, ten months before she officially ascended the throne, she had the government create the character Zhao (曌), an entirely new invention created along with 11 other characters in order to show her absolute power, and she chose this new character as her given name, which became her taboo name when she ascended the throne ten months later. The character is made up of 2 pre-existing characters: "Ming" up top meaning "light" or "clearness"; and "kong" on the bottom meaning "sky". The idea behind this is her implication that she is like the light shining from the sky. Even the pronunciation of the new character is exactly the same as "shine" in Chinese. On ascending the throne, she proclaimed herself Emperor Shengshen, the first woman ever to use the title emperor (皇帝) which had been created 900 years before by the first emperor of China Qin Shi Huang. Indeed she was the only woman in the 2100 years of imperial China ever to use the title emperor, and this again utterly shocked Confucian elites.

Traditional Chinese political theory (see the similar Salic law) did not allow a woman to ascend the throne, and Empress Wu was determined to quash the opposition and promote loyal officials within the bureaucracy. Her regime was characterized by Machiavellian cleverness and brutal despotism. During her reign, she formed her own Secret Police to deal with any opposition that might arise. She was also supported by her two lovers, the Zhang brothers (Zhang Yizhi, 張易之, and his younger brother Zhang Changzong 張昌宗). She gained popular support by advocating Buddhism but ruthlessly persecuted her opponents within the royal family and the nobility. In October 695, after several additions of characters, her imperial name was definitely set as Emperor Tiance Jinlun Shengshen (天冊金輪聖神皇帝), a name which did not undergo further changes until the end of her reign.

  • Timeline of Chinese history
  • Dynasties in Chinese history
  • Military history of China

On February 20, 705, now in her early 80s and ailing, Empress Wu was unable to thwart a coup, during which the Zhang brothers were executed. Her power ended that day, and she had to step down while Emperor Zhongzong was restored, allowing the Tang Dynasty to resume on March 3, 705. Empress Wu died nine months later, perhaps consoled by the fact that her nephew Wu Sansi (武三思), son of her half-brother and as ambitious and intriguing as she, had managed to become the real master behind the scenes, controlling the restored emperor through his empress consort with whom he was having an affair.

Although short-lived, the Zhou dynasty, according to some historians, resulted in better equality between the sexes during the succeeding Tang Dynasty.

Considering the events of her life literary allusions to Empress Wu can carry several connotations: a woman who has inappropriately overstepped her bounds, the hypocrisy of preaching compassion while simultaneously engaging in a pattern of corrupt and vicious behavior, and ruling by pulling strings in the background.

Empress Wu - Zhou Dynasty 690 - 705

Tiānshòu (天授): Oct. 16, 690 - Apr. 21, 692 (18 months)
Rúyì (如意): Apr. 22 - Oct. 22, 692 (6 months)
Chángshòu (長壽): Oct. 23, 692 - Jun. 8, 694 (19 ½ months)
Yánzài (延載): Jun. 9, 694 - Jan. 21, 695 (7 ½ months)
Zhèngshèng (證聖): Jan. 22 - Oct. 21, 695 (9 months)
Tiāncèwànsuì (天冊萬歲): Oct. 22, 695 - Jan. 19, 696 (3 months)
Wànsuìdēngfēng (萬歲登封): Jan. 20 - Apr. 21, 696 (3 months)
Wànsuìtōngtiān (萬歲通天): Apr. 22, 696 - Sept. 28, 697 (17 months)
Shéngōng (神功): Sept. 29 - Dec. 19, 697 (2 ½ months)
Shènglì (聖曆): Dec. 20, 697 - May 26, 700 (29 months)
Jiǔshì (久視): May 27, 700 - Feb. 14, 701 (8 ½ months)
Dàzú (大足): Feb. 15 - Nov. 25, 701 (9 months ½)
Cháng'ān (長安): Nov. 26, 701 - Jan. 29, 705 (38 months)
Shénlóng (神龍): Jan. 30 - Mar. 3, 705 (Zhou dynasty was abolished on March 3, 705, and the Tang Dynasty was restored that same day, but the Shenlong era continued to be used until 707)

Chinese sovereign, Chinese characters of Empress Wu, Tang Dynasty, Princess Taiping

See also

  • Chinese sovereign
  • Chinese characters of Empress Wu
  • Tang Dynasty
  • Princess Taiping


Categories: 625 births | 705 deaths | Tang Dynasty empresses

Other related archives

1950s, 577, 579, 623, 624, 625, 625 births, 635, 636, 638, 649, 651, 654, 655, 660, 665, 670, 689, 690, 692, 694, 695, 696, 697, 700, 701, 705, 705 deaths, 707, 749, Buddhism, Buddhist, Chang'an, China, Chinese characters of Empress Wu, Chinese sovereign, Comprehensive Mirror, Confucian, December 16, Dynasties in Chinese history, Emperor Gaozong, Emperor Ruizong, Emperor Taizong, Emperor Zhongzong, February 20, February 22, February 23, Guangyuan, Li Yuan, Li Zhong, Machiavellian, March 3, Military history of China, October 16, October 19, Princess Taiping, Qin Shi Huang, Salic law, Shanxi, Sichuan, Sui, Taiyuan, Tang Dynasty, Tang Dynasty empresses, Timeline of Chinese history, Zhou Dynasty, cairen, compassion, corrupt, despotism, empress consort, equality, given name, history of China, hypocrisy, née, prefecture-level city, sexes, strokes, taboo



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Empress Wu", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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