Sun Fu

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Not to be confused with the Song Dynasty philosopher Sun Fu (孫復).
Sun Fu
General of Sun Quan
Born (Unknown)
Died (Unknown)
Names
Simplified Chinese 孙辅
Traditional Chinese 孫輔
Pinyin Sūn Fǔ
Wade–Giles Sun Fu
Courtesy name Guoyi (traditional Chinese: 國儀; simplified Chinese: 国仪; pinyin: Guóyí; Wade–Giles: Kuo-i)

Sun Fu (birth and death dates unknown), courtesy name Guoyi, was a cousin of Sun Quan, a warlord who lived in the late Eastern Han Dynasty and later became the founding emperor of the state of Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period.

Life

Sun Fu was the second son of Sun Qiang, the twin brother of Sun Quan's father Sun Jian. He followed Sun Ce (Sun Jian's eldest son and successor) in his later campaigns against Yuan Shu and Liu Xun, earning great merits by raiding Lingyang and Lujiang. When Liu Xun was defeated, Sun Fu was put in charge of rebuilding the city walls, which he accomplished very well. He earned the title of General Who Pacifies the South.

Before the Battle of Red Cliffs, Sun Fu decided to surrender to Cao Cao. To this end, he sent a letter to Cao, proclaiming his intent to surrender, but this letter was intercepted. Sun Quan angrily stripped Sun Fu of all rank and imprisoned him, but spared him on account of filial duty. Sun Fu was released and died a few years after the battle, never again having a military command. His sons, however, all received rank.

Family

See also

References

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