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Qian Chu





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Qian Chu (September 29, 929 – October 7, 988), courtesy name Wende, known as Qian Hongchu before 960, also known by his posthumous name as the King Zhongyi of Wuyue, was the last kingofWuyue during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period of China. He reigned from 947 until 978, when he surrendered his kingdom to the Northern Song dynasty.

King Zhongyi of Wuyue
吳越忠懿王
King of Wuyue (more...)
King of Wuyue
ReignFebruary 17, 948 – June 9, 978
PredecessorQian Hongzong

BornSeptember 29, 929
Hang Prefecture, Wuyue
DiedOctober 7, 988(988-10-07) (aged 59)
Deng Prefecture, Northern Song
Burial
in modern Luoyang
Spouse
  • Queen Yu
  • Consort Huang
  • IssueQian Weijun
    Qian Weiyan
    others
    Names
    Qián Hóngchù (錢弘俶), later changed to Qián Chù (錢俶) in 960
    Era dates
    Adopted the era name of Later Han:
    Qianyou (乾祐): 948–950
    Adopted the era names of Later Zhou:
    Guangshun (廣順): 951–953
    Xiande (顯德): 954–960
    Adopted the era names of Song dynasty:
    Jianlong (建隆): 960–963
    Qiande (乾德): 963–968
    Kaibao (開寶): 968–976
    Taipingxingguo (太平興國): 976–978
    Posthumous name
    King Zhongyi of Qin ()
    HouseQian
    DynastyWuyue
    FatherQian Yuanguan
    MotherLady Wu Hanyue
    Qian Chu
    Traditional Chinese
    Simplified Chinese
    Qian Hongchu
    Traditional Chinese
    Simplified Chinese
    Qian Wende
    Traditional Chinese
    Simplified Chinese

    Life

    edit

    Qian Chu came to power after his brother, Qian Zong, was deposed in a coup d'état. At the time, Wuyue was at its largest territorial extent, ruling 13 zhou in modern-day Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shanghai, and Fujian. Throughout its history, Wuyue maintained a policy of nominally submitting to the successive dominant northern regimes. Unlike the other small states in the south, the Wuyue kings never declared themselves Emperor. In return, the northern regimes respected Wuyue's autonomy and conferred upon its kings high honours, one of which was the title of "Commander of All Horses and Soldiers Under Heaven". Indeed, Qian Chu changed his name from the original Qian Hongchu, because the character hong was barred by taboo (as the name of Emperor Taizu of Song's father was Zhao Hongyin (趙弘殷)).

    When the Song Dynasty unified northern China in the 960s, Qian Chu reportedly followed his ancestor Qian Liu's instruction to submit as soon as possible when the "true lord" appeared. In 960, Qian Chu submitted to Song, and changed his name in the same year. Subsequently, Qian Chu obeyed orders from the Song court to participate in the annexation of the other small southern kingdoms on behalf of the Song emperor. In 968, he was again made the King of Wuyue by the Song emperor, and was subsequently invested with further imperial honours. In 977, the new emperor, Emperor Taizong of Song, invested Qian with the nominal titles Chancellor, Chief Secretary, and Commander of All Horses and Soldiers Under Heaven.

    However, in 978, Qian Chu surrendered his territories to the Song regime, possibly under veiled threat from the Song court. Nevertheless, the "voluntary" surrender protected the Wuyue region from the ravages of war that visited other contemporary regimes. The region was able to maintain its infrastructure and economic advantage, built up over the Wuyue period, which in no small part contributed to the Yangtze Delta being the economic centre of China up to the present day.

    To allay northern suspicions and prevent conflict, Qian Chu stayed in the Song capital, Bianjing (now Kaifeng), and moved 3000 members of his household there. Qian nominally remained a king. His sons and a large number of the Wuyue elite were given various imperial posts and titles. Initially, Emperor Taizong of Song raised the prefecture of Yangzhou to the nominal state of Huaihai (淮海), and installed Qian Chu as King of Huaihai (淮海国王). In 984, Qian Chu was made King of Hannan (汉南国王) (a smaller nominal feoff) instead, and in 987, was reduced again to King of Nanyang (南阳国王), with the right to take up residence in Nanyang, but then immediately, was additionally made Prince of Xu (许王), with an enlarged feoff. In 988, Qian Chu lost his title as king and was made Prince of Deng (邓王) instead, with a larger nominal feoff and actual income.

    Qian Chu reportedly enjoyed a good personal relationship with the emperor, being regularly summoned to the palace for banquets and ball games. On his 60th birthday (by the Chinese calendar) in 988, Emperor Taizong of Song sent him wine as a gift. After drinking the wine[citation needed], he became violently ill and died that night. He was given a state funeral, was posthumously raised to King of Qin, and was buried near Luoyang.[1]

    Qian Chu had seven sons, one of whom went on to become a Chancellor in the Song court.

    Other legacy

    edit
     
    Shrine to the Qian Kings at West Lake, Hangzhou.

    Qian Chu enjoyed writing poetry. One of his published poems survives to this day.

    Like the other kings of Wuyue, Qian Chu was a devout Buddhist. Leifeng PagodainHangzhou was constructed on his orders to celebrate the conception of his son and in some versions, for Consort Huang.

    Family

    edit

    Consorts and their respective issue(s):

    References

    edit

    Notes

    edit

    General

    edit
    Regnal titles
    Preceded by

    Qian Hongzong (King Zhongxun)

    King of Wuyue
    947–978
    Succeeded by

    None (Kingdom absorbed)

    Ruler of China (Zhejiang/Northeastern Fujian)
    947–978
    Succeeded by

    Emperor Taizong of Song


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Qian_Chu&oldid=1184342318"
     



    Last edited on 9 November 2023, at 20:54  





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    This page was last edited on 9 November 2023, at 20:54 (UTC).

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