Empress Helian

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Empress Helian (赫連皇后) (died 453), formally Empress Taiwu (太武皇后), was an empress of the Chinese/Xianbei dynasty Northern Wei. Her husband was Emperor Taiwu.

She was a daughter of the Xia's founding emperor Helian Bobo (Emperor Wulie). In 428, during the reign of her brother Helian Chang, Emperor Taiwu led his Northern Wei forces to capture the Xia capital Tongwan (統萬, in modern Yulin, Shaanxi), and while Helian Chang fled, she was captured along with most nobles and officials of Xia. She and her two sisters were all taken as Emperor Taiwu's imperial consorts. In 432, she was created empress, presumably after being able to pass the traditional Tuoba tribe test by being able to forge a gold statue.

Little is known about Empress Helian's life during her husband's reign. She did not bear him any sons. In 452, he was assassinated by his eunuch Zong Ai, who claimed that, by her orders, Emperor Taiwu's son Tuoba Yu the Prince of Nan'an should be made emperor, bypassing Emperor Taiwu's apparent intended heir, Tuoba Jun, the son of Tuoba Huang the Crown Prince, who had died in 451. Tuoba Yu honored her as empress dowager, but there is no particular evidence to suggest that Empress Helian was actually involved in Zong's conspiracy. Later in 452, Zong assassinated Tuoba Yu as well, but the officials then overthrew Zong and put Tuoba Jun on the throne as Emperor Wencheng, and he honored her as grand empress dowager. She died in 453.

References

Chinese royalty
Preceded by
Empress Murong
Empress of Northern Wei
432–452
Succeeded by
Empress Feng
Empress of China (Northern)
432–452
Preceded by
Empress Sima Maoying of Liu Song
Empress of China (Henan)
432–452
Preceded by
Helian Chang's empress of Xia
Empress of China (Northern Shaanxi)
432–452
Preceded by
Helian Ding's empress of Xia
Empress of China (Central Shaanxi/Eastern Gansu)
432–452
Preceded by
Princess Murong of Northern Yan
Empress of China (Liaoning)
436–452
Preceded by
Princess Tuoba of Northern Liang
Empress of China (Central/Western Gansu)
439–452
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.