This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Empress Yan" Li Qi's wife – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Empress Yan (Chinese: 閻皇后,; personal name unknown) was an empress of the Di-led Chinese Cheng-Han dynasty. Her husband was Li Qi. He created her empress in 334 after he seized the throne following his brother Li Yue (李越)'s assassination of their father Li Xiong (Emperor Wu)'s designated heir, their cousin Li Ban (Emperor Ai). There was no further mentioning of her in historical records, and it is not known whether she was still alive at the time that Li Qi was overthrown by his father's cousin Li Shou (Emperor Zhaowen) in 338.
Chinese royalty | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Empress of Cheng-Han 334–338? |
Succeeded by |
Empresses, queens, and princesses of the Sixteen Kingdoms
| |
---|---|
Empresses, queens, and princesses consort | |
Cheng-Han (304–347) |
|
Han-Zhao (304–329) |
|
Later Zhao (319–351) |
|
Former Liang (320–376) |
|
Former Yan (337–370) |
|
Former Qin (351–394) |
|
Later Yan (384–409) |
|
Later Qin (384–417) |
|
Western Qin (385–431) |
|
Later Liang (386–403) |
|
Southern Liang (397–414) |
|
Northern Liang (397–460) |
|
Southern Yan (398–410) |
|
Xia (407–431) |
|
Northern Yan (407–436) |
|
Ran Wei (350–352) |
|
Empresses and princesses dowager | |
Han-Zhao (304–329) |
|
Later Zhao (319–351) |
|
Former Yan (337–370) |
|
Former Qin (351–394) |
|
Later Yan (384–409) |
|
Later Liang (386–403) |
|
Southern Yan (398–410) |
|
Western Liang (400–421) |
|
Posthumous empresses | |
Later Yan (384–409) |
|
Xia → Shang → Zhou → Qin → Han → 3 Kingdoms → Jìn / 16 Kingdoms → S. Dynasties / N. Dynasties → Sui → Tang → 5 Dynasties & 10 Kingdoms → Liao / Song / W. Xia / Jīn → Yuan → Ming → Qing |