Liang 梁 |
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Capital | Jiankang (502-552, 555-557) Jiangling (553-587) |
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Government | Monarchy | |||
Emperor | ||||
- 502-549 | Emperor Wu of Liang | |||
- 549-551 | Emperor Jianwen of Liang | |||
- 552-555 | Emperor Yuan of Liang | |||
- 555-557 | Emperor Jing of Liang | |||
- 555-562 | Emperor Xuan of Western Liang | |||
- 585-587 | Emperor Jing of Western Liang | |||
History | ||||
- Established | 30 April 502[1] 502 | |||
- Jiankang's fall to Hou Jing | 24 April 549[2] | |||
- Jiangling's fall to Western Wei | 7 January 555[3] | |||
- Emperor Jing's yielding the throne to Chen Baxian (often viewed as end of Liang) | ||||
- Disestablished | 26 October 587[4] 587 |
The Liang Dynasty (Chinese: 梁朝; pinyin: Liáng cháo) (502-557), also known as the Southern Liang Dynasty (南梁), was the third of the Southern dynasties in China and was followed by the Chen Dynasty. The Western Liang Dynasty (西梁), with its capital established at Jiangling in 555 by Emperor Xuan, a grandson of Liang's founder Emperor Wu, claimed to be the legitimate successor of the Liang Dynasty; it was subservient to the successive Western Wei Dynasty, Northern Zhou Dynasty, and Sui Dynasty, and was abolished by Emperor Wen of Sui in 587.
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During the Liang Dynasty, in 547 a Persian embassy paid tribute to the Liang, amber was recorded as originating from Persia by the Liang Shu (Liang Book).[5]
The ending date for Liang Dynasty itself is a matter of controversy among historians. Many historians consider the end of Emperor Jing's reign in 556, when he was forced to yield the throne to Chen Baxian, who established Chen Dynasty, to be Liang's end date. Others regard the abolition of Western Liang in 587 to be the true end of Liang.
Posthumous Name | Family name and given names | Period of Reigns | Era names and their according range of years |
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Convention: Liang + posthumous name | |||
Emperor Wu of Liang - Wu Di
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Xiao Yan (蕭衍 Xiāo Yǎn) | 502-549[6] | Tianjian (天監 tiān-jiān) 502-519 Putong (普通 pǔ-tōng) 520-527 Datong (大通 dà-tōng) 527-529 Zhongdatong (中大通 zhōng-dà-tōng) 529-534 Datong (大同 dà-tóng) 535-546 Zhongdatong (中大同 zhōng-dà-tóng) 546-547 Taiqing (太清 tài-qīng) 547-549 |
Emperor Jianwen of Liang - Jianwen Di
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Xiao Gang (蕭綱 xiāo gāng) | 549-551 | Dabao (大寶 dà bǎo) 550-551 |
Prince of Yuzhang - Yu Zhang Wang
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蕭棟 xiāo dòng | 551-552 | Tianzheng (天正 tiān zhèng) 551-552 |
Emperor Yuan of Liang - Yuan Di
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蕭繹 xiāo yì | 552-555[7] | Chengsheng (承聖 chéng shèng) 552-555 |
Marquess of Zhenyang - Zhen Yang Hou
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蕭淵明 xiāo yuān míng | 555 | Tiancheng (天成 tiān chéng) 555 |
Emperor Jing of Liang - Jing Di
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蕭方智 xiāo fāng zhì | 555-557[8] | Shaotai (紹泰 shào tài) 555-556 Taiping (太平 tài píng) 556-557 |
Temple Names ( Miao Hao 廟號 miào hào) | Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號 ) | Personal Names | Period of Reigns | Era Names (Nián Hào 年號) and their relevant range of years |
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Convention: Xi Liang + posthumous name | ||||
Note: some historians consider Western Liang as a continuation of the Liang Dynasty since it was founded by Xiao Cha (Emperor Xuan), a grandson of Xiao Yan (Emperor Wu), the founder of the Liang Dynasty. | ||||
Zhong Zong (中宗 zhōng zōng) | Xuan Di|宣帝 xuān dì | 蕭詧 xiāo chá | 555-562 | Dading (大定 dà dìng) 555-562 |
Shi Zong (世宗 shì zōng) | Xiao Ming Di|孝明帝 xiào míng dì | 蕭巋 xiāo kuī | 562-585 | Tianbao (天保 tiān bǎo) 562-585 |
Did not exist | Xiao Jing Di|孝靖帝 xiào jìng dì or Ju Gong|莒公 jǔ gōng | 蕭琮 xiāo cóng | 585-587 | Guangyun (廣運 guǎng yùn) 562-585 |
Tombs of a number of members of the ruling Xiao family, with their sculptural ensembles, in various states of preservation, are located near Nanjing.[9] The best surviving example of the Liang Dynasty's monumental statuary is perhaps the ensemble of the Tomb of Xiao Xiu (475–518), a brother of Emperor Wu, located in Qixia District east of Nanjing.[10] [11]
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