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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Brief reign  





3 Death  





4 Family  





5 Ancestry  





6 References  














Xiao Dong








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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Xiao Dong
蕭棟
Emperor of the Liang Dynasty
Reign6 October 551 - 1 January 552[1]
PredecessorEmperor Jianwen
SuccessorXiao Ji (in the west)
Emperor Yuan (in the central and south)
Hou Jing (in the south-east)

Died3 May 552
ConsortsLady Zhang
Names
Family name: Xiāo (蕭)
Given name: Dòng (棟)
Era name and dates
Tiān zhèng (天正): 551
HouseLanling Xiao
FatherXiao Huan
MotherLady Wang

Xiao Dong (Chinese: 蕭棟; died 3 May 552[2]), courtesy name Yuanji (元吉), sometimes known by his pre-ascension title of Prince of Yuzhang (豫章王), was briefly an emperor of the Chinese Liang Dynasty. In 551, with the general Hou Jing in control of the imperial government at the capital Jiankang, Hou, wanting to show off his strength, deposed Xiao Dong's granduncle Emperor Jianwen and replaced him with Xiao Dong, the grandson of Emperor Jianwen's older brother Xiao Tong, who was originally the founder Emperor Wu's crown prince.

During his brief reign, Xiao Dong was entirely under Hou's control.[3] Just two and a half months after Xiao Dong became emperor, Hou forced him to yield the throne to himself, who took the throne as the Emperor of Han. In May 552, troops under Wang Sengbian, a general loyal to Xiao Dong's granduncle Xiao Yi retook Jiankang, and the general Zhu Maichen (朱買臣), under Xiao Yi's instructions, threw Xiao Dong and his two brothers into the Yangtze River to drown.

Background

[edit]

Not much is known about Xiao Dong's early life, including when he was born. What is known is that he was the oldest son of Xiao Huan (蕭歡) the Prince of Yuzhang, the oldest son of Emperor Wu's oldest son and first crown prince Xiao Tong. When Xiao Tong died in May 531, Emperor Wu had considered, pursuant to Confucian principles of succession, creating Xiao Huan crown prince, but ultimately decided against it and created him only the Prince of Yuzhang. Emperor Wu created Xiao Tong's younger brother Xiao Gang crown prince instead. Xiao Dong's mother was Xiao Huan's wife Princess Wang. He had two younger brothers known to history—Xiao Qiao (蕭橋) and Xiao Jiu (蕭樛). After Xiao Huan's death on 21 January 541,[4] Xiao Dong inherited the title of Prince of Yuzhang.

In 548, the general Hou Jing rebelled and, in 549, captured the capital Jiankang. Hou put the surviving princes of the Xiao imperial clan, including Xiao Dong, under effective house arrest. Emperor Wu died later that year, and Xiao Gang succeeded him as Emperor Jianwen, albeit under Hou's control.

In 551, Hou, after attempting to defeat Emperor Jianwen's brother Xiao Yi the Prince of Xiangdong but being defeated by Xiao Yi's general Wang Sengbian, retreated to Jiankang, and he, believing that his days may be numbered, wanted to take the throne. In order to show off his power, he deposed Emperor Jianwen and replaced him with Xiao Dong. When the imperial procession went to Xiao Dong's residence to escort him to the palace, Xiao Dong and his wife Princess Zhang were tending their garden, growing vegetables to supplement their diet in light of the war-induced famine in the capital region. He was shocked when the imperial procession arrived, and, not sure how to respond, got onto the imperial carriage while crying. Hou declared him emperor.

Brief reign

[edit]

Xiao Dong had no actual power, as power was in the hands of Hou Jing. Xiao Dong posthumously honored his grandfather Xiao Tong and father Xiao Huan as emperors, and honored his mother Princess Dowager Wangasempress dowager. He created his wife Princess Zhang empress.

Two and a half months after Xiao Dong became emperor, Hou forced Xiao Dong to yield the throne to him. Hou, who became the emperor of a newly declared Han state, created Xiao Dong the Prince of Huaiyin, but imprisoned him and his brothers Xiao Qiao and Xiao Jiu in a secret prison.

Death

[edit]

In spring 552, Wang Sengbian captured Jiankang, forcing Hou Jing to flee. Xiao Yi had initially ordered Wang to have Xiao Dong killed, but Wang declined—stating that while he was willing to fight Hou, the responsibility of killing an emperor should be entrusted to someone else. Xiao Yi therefore gave the order instead to another general, Zhu Maichen.

Meanwhile, when Hou fled, Xiao Dong and his brothers broke out of their prison, but they were still in chains. They encountered the general Du Shi (杜崱), and Du removed their chains. Xiao Qiao and Xiao Jiu happily stated, "Finally today we have avoided an unnatural death." Xiao Dong responded, "It is difficult to know whether we are facing good fortune or ill fortune. I am still fearful." Soon thereafter, they encounter Zhu, who invited them to drink on his ship. Before they finished, Zhu's guards grabbed them and threw them into the Yangtze River to drown.

Family

[edit]

Consorts:

Ancestry

[edit]
Xiao Shunzhi
Emperor Wu of Liang (464–549)
Empress Wenxian (d. 471)
Xiao Tong (501–531)
Ding Daoqian
Empress Dowager Mu (484–526)
Xiao Huan
Cai Xingzong (415–472)
Cai Zun (467—523)
Empress Zhaode
Xiao Dong (d. 552)
Empress Dowager Wang

References

[edit]
  1. ^ ren'xu day of the 8th month and ji'chou day of the 11th month of the 2nd year of the Da'bao era, per vol.164 of Zizhi Tongjian
  • ^ xin'mao day of the 3rd month of the 1st year of the Cheng'sheng era, per Emperor Yuan's biography in Book of Liang
  • ^ Xiao Dong was not listed among the emperors of Liang in Book of Liang and indeed, did not have his own biography in the work.
  • ^ ren'zi day of the 12th month of the 6th year of the Da'tong era, per Emperor Wu's biography in Book of Liang
  • Regnal titles
    Preceded by

    Emperor Jianwen of Liang

    Emperor of Liang Dynasty (Western)
    551
    Succeeded by

    Xiao Ji (Prince of Wuling)

    Emperor of Liang Dynasty (Central/Southern)
    551
    Succeeded by

    Emperor Yuan of Liang

    Emperor of China (Southeastern)
    551
    Succeeded by

    Hou Jing of Han


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Xiao_Dong&oldid=1228186817"

    Categories: 
    Liang dynasty emperors
    6th-century births
    552 deaths
    Murdered emperors of China
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    This page was last edited on 9 June 2024, at 22:11 (UTC).

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