Jump to content

Liu Yong (Three Kingdoms)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liu Yong
劉永
Prince of Ganling (甘陵王)
Tenure230–263
Prince of Lu (魯王)
TenureJuly 221 – 230

Bornbetween 207 and 221
DiedUnknown
Names
Family name: Liu (劉)
Given name: Yong (永)
Courtesy name: Gongshou (公壽)
HouseHouse of Liu
FatherLiu Bei

Liu Yong (fl.221-264), courtesy name Gongshou, was an imperial prince of the state of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period of China. He was a son of Liu Bei, the founding emperor of Shu Han, and a younger half-brother of Liu Shan, the second Shu Han emperor.[1]

Life

[edit]

Liu Yong was born in an unknown year. His father, Liu Bei, was a warlord of the late Eastern Han dynasty who became the founding emperor of the state of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period. His mother was one of Liu Bei's concubines. He was a younger half-brother of Liu Shan, Liu Bei's successor and the second emperor of Shu.[2]

Sometime in July 221, about three months after Liu Bei became emperor, he sent Xu Jing, the Minister over the Masses, as an emissary to read out an imperial edict and grant Liu Yong the title "Prince of Lu" (魯王).[3]

In 230, during Liu Shan's reign, Liu Yong's title was changed to "Prince of Ganling" (甘陵王).[4] Liu Yong hated the eunuch Huang Hao, whom Liu Shan highly trusted and favoured. After Huang Hao came to power, he frequently spoke ill of Liu Yong in front of Liu Shan, resulting in Liu Shan giving Liu Yong the cold shoulder and refusing to meet him for over 10 years.[5]

In 264, one year after Shu was conquered by its rival state, Wei, Liu Yong moved to Luoyang, the Wei imperial capital. The Wei government appointed him as a Commandant of Equipage (奉車都尉) and enfeoffed him as a district marquis (鄉侯).[6] It is not known when Liu Yong died.

Liu Yong had a grandson, Liu Xuan (劉玄; fl.307 - 347), who survived the Disaster of Yongjia in 311. In his Shu Shi Pu, Sun Sheng indicated that he met Liu Xuan in Chengdu during an expedition against Li Shi (the last ruler of the Cheng-Han regime) in 347 (3rd year of the Yonghe era during the reign of Emperor Mu of Jin). Sun claimed that Li Xiong, founder of the Cheng-Han regime, created Liu Xuan as his Duke of Anle, after Liu fled to Shu during the chaos of the Yongjia era.[7]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]


(一)^ de Crespigny (2007), p. 541.

(二)^ () Sanguozhi vol. 34.

(三)^ (使) Sanguozhi vol. 34.

(四)^ () Sanguozhi vol. 34.

(五)^ () Sanguozhi vol. 34.

(六)^ () Sanguozhi vol. 34.

(七)^ () Sun Sheng's Shu Shipu annotation in Sanguozhi vol. 34.

  • Chen, Shou (3rd century). Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi).
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2007). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms 23-220 AD. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9789004156050.
  • Pei, Songzhi (5th century). Annotations to Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi zhu).