Liu Yan (Southern Han)
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- This is a Chinese name; the family name is Liu.
Liu Yan (889 - 942) was King of Nanhai, China (911-917) and later declared himself the emperor of the Southern Han Kingdom during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period in China.
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[edit] Rise to power
The Tang Dynasty, which had controlled all of China, for about three centuries, fell in 907. Liu Yan’s brother, Liu Yin, was named regional governor by the Tang court in 905, two years before its fall. He assumed the title Prince of Nanping in 909. After his father’s death in 911, he succeeded him as king of Nanhai. Six years later, he declared himself emperor of Great Yuè (越) (Viet). He renamed the kingdom Southern Han two years later in 919.
[edit] Reign
Liu Yan reigned over the Southern Han kingdom until his death in 943. Due to the geographic location of the kingdom, not only did Liu have to deal with Chinese kingdoms such as Southern Tang, Min, and Chu, but non-Chinese peoples, most notably the Vietnamese, who only recently threw off the Chinese yoke. In 939, Liu Yan decided that it was time to bring the Vietnamese back into the Chinese orbit. However, despite the fact that the Vietnamese had yet to truly organize into a strong polity, the Southern Han forces were unsuccessful in subduing the Vietnamese.
While he reigned ably on the domestic front during his two and a half decades in power, his rule was unremarkable. He was not able to turn Canton into one of the centers of Southern learning and culture that Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Chengdu had emerged into.
[edit] See Also
[edit] References
Mote, F.W. (1999). Imperial China (900-1800). Harvard University Press, 11, 15. ISBN 0-674-01212-7.
(1999) in Tarling, Nicholas: The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia (Volume One, Part One): From early times to c. 1500. Cambridge University Press, 139. ISBN 0-521-66369-5.
Preceded by Liu Yin |
King of Nanhai 911-917 |
Succeeded by None (dissolved kingdom) |
Preceded by None (Founder of Kingdom) |
Emperor of Southern Han 917-943 |
Succeeded by Liu Cheng (劉晟) |