Later Shu

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Later Shu (Hou Shu, 後蜀) was one of the Ten Kingdoms during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period in China from 907 to 960. It was located in present-day Sichuan with its capital in Chengdu.

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[edit] Founding

The original Shu Kingdom that was founded in 907 from the ashes of the Tang Dynasty was conquered by the Later Tang Dynasty, the second of the five dynasties that ruled the north during this period of time.

Meng Zhixiang commanded elements of the Later Tang Dynasty in the conquered territories of the Shu Kingdom. He was named military governor in 925, but had plotted to make himself emperor, an action he took in 934 as, Li Siyuan, emperor of the Later Tang Dynasty, had seen relations with their powerful neighbors to the north, the Khitan, sour by his rule.

[edit] Territorial Extant

The Later Shu Kingdom held essentially the same territory as the Former Shu kingdom. The kingdom held most of present-day Sichuan, along with southern Gansu and Shaanxi, western Hebei and all of present-day Chongqing. As with the Former Shu, the capital of the kingdom was at Chengdu.

[edit] Succession

Meng Zhixiang died the year following his self-declaration of ascending to the position of emperor of the Shu. His son, Meng Chang ruled very ably for thirty years until the kingdom was incorporated into the expanding Song Dynasty from the north in 965.

[edit] Rulers

'Sovereigns in Hou (Later) Shu Kingdom 934 - 965'
Temple Names ( Miao Hao 廟號 miao4 hao4) Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號 ) Personal Names Period of Reigns Era Names (Nian Hao 年號) and their according range of years
高祖 gao1 zu3 Too tedious thus not used when referring to this sovereign 孟知祥 meng4 zhi1 xiang2 934 Mingde (明德 ming2 de2) 934
後主 hou4 zhu3 Did not exist 孟昶 meng4 chang3 938-965 Mingde (明德 ming2 de2) 934-938

Guangzheng (廣政 guang3 zheng4) 938-965

[edit] Reference

Mote, F.W. (1999). Imperial China (900-1800). Harvard University Press, 11-15. ISBN 0-674-01212-7. 

[edit] External links

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