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Records of the Three States: The Book of Wei

Fascicle 5: Empresses and Consorts

5.155
The Classic of Changes states, "A man properly takes his place
outside the home; a woman properly takes her place within the
home. For a man and a woman to be proper is the greatest
principle of Heaven and Earth."[1] Without exception, the wise
kings of bygone days understood the regulations regarding
empresses and consorts and complied with the morals of Heaven
and Earth. Therefore, two consorts were given in marriage at Gui
[OMITTED], and the way of Yu [OMITTED] was able to thrive; Ren [OMITTED] and Si [OMITTED]
married into the Ji [OMITTED], and the Zhou house thus prospered.[2]
Whether a state rises or falls, lives or dies is ever due to this. The
[Apocryphon to the] Spring and Autumn Annals: Explaining [the
Themes and Words
] says that the Son of Heaven has twelve
women and the nobles have nine.[3] If one looks into it, this is a
sound rule in terms of both emotion and reason. But later ages
were extravagant and undisciplined and indulged their wasteful
desires to the point that it left men and women pining and single
and affected and shook the spirit of harmony.[4] They only exalted
sex and did not take pure goodness as basic. Therefore, customs
and moral teaching deteriorated, and the major relationships were
destroyed. Is it not a pity? Alas, may whosoever possesses a
kingdom or a family always be able to learn from this!

In the Han system, the grandmother of the emperor was called
grand empress dowager, the mother of the emperor was called
empress dowager, the wife of the emperor was called empress, and
for the remainder of the palace women there were fourteen ranks.
Wei followed the Han model; all the terms for mothers and
empresses were the same as under the old system. But from the
rank of lady down, there were additions and deletions. When the
Grand Progenitor [Cao Cao] established the kingdom, he initially
named a queen (wanghou [OMITTED]), with five ranks below her: lady,
brilliant companion, favorite beauty, elegant lady, and beautiful
lady. Emperor Wen [i.e., Cao Pi] added honored concubine
(guipin), lady of chaste beauty (shuyuan [OMITTED]), lady of cultivated


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countenance (xiurong [OMITTED]), lady of complete complaisance
(shuncheng [OMITTED]), and sweet lady. Emperor Ming [Cao Rui]
added pure consort (shufei [OMITTED]), lady of bright loveliness
(zhaohua [OMITTED]), and lady of cultivated deportment (xiuyi [OMITTED])
and abolished the office of lady of complete complaisance. Only in
the Taihe [OMITTED] reign period [227-233] did Emperor Ming restore
lady to its position above pure consort.[5] From lady down, there
were altogether twelve grades of aristocratic rank:[6] The positions
of honored concubine or lady were second only to empress, and
there were no equivalent aristocratic ranks; the position of pure
consort was equivalent to chancellor of state and the aristocratic
rank was comparable to king (zhuhou wang [OMITTED]);[7] the position
of lady of chaste beauty was equivalent to grandee secretary (yushi
dafu
[OMITTED]), and the aristocratic rank was comparable to
5.156
prefectural duke (xian gong [OMITTED]); brilliant companion was
comparable to prefectural marquis (xian hou [OMITTED]); lady of bright
loveliness was comparable to district marquis (xiang hou [OMITTED]);
lady of cultivated countenance was comparable to commune
marquis (ting hou [OMITTED]); lady of cultivated deportment was
comparable to marquis within the passes; favorite beauty was
equivalent to an official ranking fully two thousand bushels;
elegant lady was equivalent to an official ranking exactly two
thousand bushels; beautiful lady was equivalent to an official
ranking equivalent to two thousand bushels; and sweet lady was
equivalent to one thousand bushels.

Empress Bian the Celebrious of the Martial Emperor (Wu Xuan
Bian huanghou [OMITTED]), whose home of record was Kaiyang
[OMITTED] in Langye, was the mother of Emperor Wen.[8] Originally, she
was in a brothel,[A] but when she was twenty, the Grand Progenitor
took her as a concubine at Qiao.[9] Later, she followed him to
Luoyang. When Dong Zhuo [OMITTED] (d. 192) rebelled, the Grand
Progenitor went eastward in disguise to avoid trouble.[10] Yuan Shu
spread news of his death, and at the time those of the Grand
Progenitor's associates who had come to Luoyang all wanted to go
home.[11] The empress stopped them, saying, "Lord Cao's fate as yet
cannot be known. If you go home today and tomorrow he is
alive, could you look him in the eye again? And if calamity should
happen to befall us, what misery is there in dying together?"[12]

They did as she said. The Grand Progenitor learned of it and
praised her. At the beginning of the Jian'an period, Lady Ding [OMITTED]
was set aside, and he made the empress his next wife.[13] He had
the empress raise all his sons whose mothers had died.[B] When


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Emperor Wen was named heir apparent, the left and right chief
attendants (zuo you zhangyu [OMITTED]) congratulated her, saying,
"Since the general has been made heir apparent, everyone in the
empire is overjoyed. You should open your coffers and bestow
rewards."[14] She replied, "The king named Pi successor because he
is the eldest. I should just count myself lucky that I did not make
the mistake of failing to teach and guide him. Why should I also
bestow gifts?" The chief attendant returned and told the Grand
Progenitor of this exchange. The Grand Progenitor was pleased
and said, "Not showing your anger and maintaining your dignity
when you are glad are surely the most difficult of accomplishments."

[A]

The Wei History says: The empress was born at Baiting [OMITTED] in Qi [OMITTED]
commandery on the day yisi [OMITTED] in the twelfth month of Yanxi [OMITTED]
3.[15] There was a yellow pneuma that filled the room for a long time. .
Her father, the Attentive Marquis (Jing hou [OMITTED]), wondered at it and
asked the diviner Wang Dan [OMITTED] about it.[16] Dan said, "This is an
auspicious sign."[17]

[B]

The Wei Epitome says: In the beginning, the Grand Progenitor had
Lady Ding, and then Lady Liu, who gave birth to Zixiu [Cao Ang]
and the Senior Princess of Qinghe (Qinghe zhang gongzhu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]). Liu died young, and Ding raised Zixiu. Zixiu fell at Rang [OMITTED],
and Ding would always say, "Having taken my son and killed him, you
don't think of him anymore!" Then she would weep uncontrollably.
The Grand Progenitor found this exasperating and sent her back to her
family, hoping she would have a change of heart. Later, he went to see
her. She was weaving just then, and when someone from outside
conveyed the words "His lordship has arrived," she remained kneeling
at the loom. The Grand Progenitor arrived, and stroking her back, said,
"Turn around and look at me and let us ride back together!" She did
not turn to face him or respond. He withdrew and, standing outside
the door, spoke again: "Might it still be possible?" But there was no
reply. He said, "Then this is really goodbye" and broke off with her.
He wanted her family to marry her off to someone else, but they did
not dare. Earlier, when Lady Ding had already become the principal
wife and had additionally taken on Zixiu, she had insufficient regard for

5.157
the empress and her sons. When Empress Bian became the next wife,
she did not think about this old grudge. When the Grand Progenitor
was away, she sent someone to take presents to Lady Ding with every
season of the year. She also received her privately, inviting her to take
the seat of honor and taking the place below her. She received her

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when she came and saw her off when she left, just as in former days.
Ding apologized, "How can you always be so kind to a castoff such as
me?" Afterward, when Ding died, the empress asked the Grand
Progenitor to be allowed to hold the funeral. He permitted it, and she
was buried south of Xucheng [OMITTED].[18] Later, when the Grand Progenitor
was troubled by illness and thought he would not recover, he sighed,
saying, "In all of my thoughts and deeds, there has never been anything
that I was ashamed of in my heart. But if there is a soul after death
and should Zixiu ask, `Where is my mother?'—how shall I reply?"

The Wei History says: The empress was by nature thrifty and frugal
and did not value ornament and beauty. She had no patterned
embroidery or pearls or jade, and her utensils were all of black lacquer.
The Grand Progenitor once obtained several sets of famous ear
ornaments and bade the empress to choose a set. She selected a
middling set, and when the Grand Progenitor asked her why, she
replied, "It would be greedy to pick the best and hypocritical to pick
the worst, so I picked the middling ones."

In Jian'an 24 [219/220], she was made queen, and the patent
said, "Lady Bian has had the virtue of a model mother in rearing
all of my sons. Now let her be promoted to queen. Let the heir
apparent and the imperial marquises take their places by her side
and all the ministers wish her long life. Let the death sentences
within the kingdom be commuted by one degree."

In Jian'an 25 [220/221], the Grand Progenitor died and
Emperor Wen assumed the royal throne.[19] He honored the queen
as queen dowager. When he succeeded to the imperial throne, he
honored her, calling her empress dowager and designating her
Palace of Eternal Longevity[20] (Yongshou gong [OMITTED]).[C] When
Emperor Ming assumed the throne, he honored the empress
dowager as the grand empress dowager.

[C]

The Wei History says: Because the state's finances were insufficient, the
empress reduced her livery and comestibles and got rid of all her
objects of gold and silver. [Cao] Zhi, the king of Dong'e [OMITTED], was
her youngest son, and she loved him best. Later, when Zhi committed
an offense and was reported by the officials concerned, Emperor Wen
had Chief Commandant of Imperial Equipages (fengju duwei [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) [Bian] Lan [OMITTED], who was the son of the empress's younger brother,
take the deliberations of the highest officials and report them to her.
The empress said, "I did not expect this son to do such a thing. Go
back and tell the emperor that he cannot violate the laws of the country


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on my account." And when she personally saw the emperor, she said
nothing about it.

Your servant Songzhi notes: Emperor Wen dreamed that he was
rubbing a coin. He wanted the markings to disappear, but they became
even clearer. He asked Zhou Xuan [OMITTED] about this.[21] Xuan replied,
"This derives from a problem in Your Majesty's own household.
Although you are wishing for something, the imperial mother does not
concur." Thus, the empress's intentions could not have been as stated
in this history [i.e., the Wei History].[22]

The Wei History also says: Whenever the empress dowager went on
campaigns with the army and saw elderly, white-haired people, she
would always halt the carriage and call them over to ask how they were.
She would present them with taffeta and face them weeping, saying, "I
regret that my parents died before I came into my own." Whenever the
empress dowager saw her own relatives, she did not put on a charming
face. She always said, "In the management of your daily affairs you
should strive for economy and frugality. You should not expect rewards
or gifts, but be mindful of your own excesses. The imperial in-laws
must find it queer that I treat them so stingily, but it is because I have
my own norms and standards. I have served Emperor Wu [Cao Cao]
for forty or fifty years and have practiced frugality for a long time. I
cannot change myself to be extravagant. If any among you violates a
law, I can even increase the offense one degree. Do not expect money,
grain, kindness, or leniency." The emperor [Cao Cao] built a mansion
for the empress's younger brother [Bian] Bing [OMITTED]. When it was
finished, the empress paid a visit to it and invited her entire family and
her in-laws. She offered an inferior cuisine and had no special foods.
The empress and her entourage fed on vegetables and millet and had
no fish or meat. Such was her frugality.[23]

5.158
During the Huangchu period, Emperor Wen wanted to ennoble
posthumously the empress dowager's parents. Master of Writing
(shang shu [OMITTED]) Chen Qun [OMITTED] memorialized, saying,[24]

Your Majesty, with Your sage virtue, responded to destiny and
received the mandate. You established the dynasty and reformed
the regulations and should forever stand as a model for later ages.
According to the texts of the canonical books, there are no regulations
for distributing land to and bestowing titles upon one's
wife's people. In the ritual canons, the wife's noble rank depends
on the husband.[25] Qin went against the old laws, and Han did
the same. Theirs were not the excellent canons of the early rulers.


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The emperor said, "This argument is correct. It shall not be done.
We shall take the document you have initiated and order it sent
down and kept in the imperial secretariat (taige [OMITTED]) to serve
forever as a model for later ages."[26]

In the spring of Taihe 4 [230], Emperor Ming did confer the
posthumous title Respectful Marquis of Kaiyang (Kaiyang Gong
hou [OMITTED]) on the empress dowager's grandfather Guang [OMITTED].[27]
Her father Yuan [OMITTED] was called Attentive Marquis, her grandmother
Zhou [OMITTED] was made countess of Yangdu (Yangdu jun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) and lady of the Respectful Marquis (Gong hou furen [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]). All received seals and ribbons of office. In the fifth month of
that year [May/June], the empress died.[28] In the seventh month
[July/August], she was buried with Cao Cao at Gao Tumulus
(Gaoling [OMITTED]).[29]

Earlier, the empress dowager's younger brother Bing had been
made a marquis of the capital district (du xiang hou [OMITTED]) for
his merit.[30] In the year Huangchu 7 [226/227], he was promoted
and appointed both marquis of Kaiyang (Kaiyang hou [OMITTED]),
with a benefice of twelve hundred households, and general of
brilliant achievements (zhaolie jiangjun [OMITTED]).[D] When Bing
died, his son Lan succeeded him. As a youth Lan possessed talent
and learning,[E] and he became chief commandant of imperial
equipages, scouting and attacking general (youji jiangjun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) and honorary cavalier attendant in regular attendance (sanji
changshi
[OMITTED]). When Lan died, his son Hui [OMITTED] succeeded
him.[F] Moreover, Bing's benefice was divided, and Lan's younger
brother Lin [OMITTED] became a full marquis and rose in office to be
colonel of foot soldiers (bubing xiaowei [OMITTED]). The daughter
of Lan's son Long [OMITTED] became empress of the Duke of Gaogui
District.[31] Because Long was the empress's father, he became
imperial household grandee (guanglu dafu [OMITTED]) and
advanced in position with unusual rapidity. He was appointed
marquis of Suiyang district (Suiyang xiang hou [OMITTED]), and his
wife Wang [OMITTED] became countess of Xianyang district (Xianyang
xiangjun [OMITTED]). Long's late wife Liu [OMITTED] was posthumously
appointed countess of Shunyang district (Shunyang xiangjun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) because she was the empress's mother. Lin's daughter also
became empress of the King of Chenliu.[32] At the time, Lin had
already died, but his wife Liu [OMITTED] was appointed countess of
Guangyang district (Guangyang xiangjun [OMITTED]).[33]

[D]

The Wei Epitome says: Earlier, in Jian'an times, Empress Bian's younger
brother Bing attained a position as major of a separate regiment (biebu


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sima [OMITTED]).[34] The empress once complained to Cao Cao, who
replied, "But isn't it enough that he gets to be my little brother-in-law?"
She also wanted Cao Cao to give him money and silk. Cao Cao
again said, "But isn't it sufficient that you misappropriate things and
give them to him?" Therefore, to the end of Cao Cao's days, Bing's
office was not changed, neither was his wealth increased.

[E]

The Wei Epitome says: Lan presented a rhapsody praising and
recounting the beauty of the heir apparent's [ Cao Pi's] virtue. The
heir apparent replied, saying, "A rhapsody speaks of the attributes of
objective categories, and a eulogy praises the form and appearance of
great virtue. Therefore, their authors do not falsify the words, and their
recipients must live up to them. How can I live up to this rhapsody of
yours? Formerly, when Wuqiu Shouwang [OMITTED] once discoursed
on a precious tripod cauldron and He Wu [OMITTED] and others sang
eulogies, they even received rewards of gold and silk.[35] Although your
action has not been sincere, the intent is commendable. We now award
you one ox." Thenceforth, Lan was treated as an intimate and
respected.

[F]

5.159
The Wei Epitome says: In Emperor Ming's time, Lan saw that while
there were two external difficulties, the emperor devoted his attention
to his household.[36] Lan always took advantage of attending upon and
accompanying the emperor to remonstrate earnestly with him several
times. Although the emperor was unable to follow his advice, he still
acknowledged his sincerity. Later, Lan suffered from diabetes caused by
drinking. At the time, Emperor Ming believed in a shamaness's cure
using water. He sent someone to deliver the water to Lan, but Lan was
unwilling to drink it. The emperor summoned him and asked why. Lan
said that in curing illness one should use prescribed medicines. How
could one trust in this? The emperor was irked, but Lan never did take
the cure. Later, the diabetes gradually worsened and Lan died. Thus
people of today view Lan as someone who was fond of speaking
bluntly, but when they say that he committed suicide because the
emperor humiliated him face-to-face, such was not actually the case.

Empress Zhen the Illustrious of the Civilizing Emperor (Wen Zhao
Zhen huanghou [OMITTED]), whose home of record was Wuji [OMITTED]
in Zhongshan [OMITTED], was the mother of Emperor Ming and a
descendant of Grand Guardian (taibao [OMITTED]) Zhen Han [OMITTED] of
Han times.[37] The family had been officials for generations at two
thousand bushels.[38] Her father Yi [OMITTED] was prefect of Shangcai [OMITTED]
[OMITTED].[39] She lost her father when she was three.[G] Later, when the


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armies of the empire rebelled and there was also famine, people all
sold their precious objects of gold, silver, pearls, and jade.[40] At that
time, the empress's family had an abundance of stored grain, and
they bought many such objects with it. The empress was ten or so
and said to her mother, "Although the world is now in turmoil,
we are buying more precious objects. `Though a man may be
innocent, just possessing a jade may constitute a crime.'[41] Moreover,
all about us everyone is starving and in want. It would be
better to give our grain as relief to kinsmen and neighboring
villages and to practice benevolence and charity on a broad scale."

The whole family agreed it was a good idea and followed her
advice.[H]

[G]

The Wei History says: Yi married a woman named Zhang [OMITTED] from
Changshan [OMITTED], and she gave birth to three boys and five girls.[42] The
eldest son Yu [OMITTED] died young. Next was Yan [OMITTED], who was recommended
as filially pious and incorrupt, was clerk (yuan [OMITTED]) to the general-in-chief
(da jiangjun [OMITTED]), and was chief of Quliang [OMITTED].[43] Next was
Yao [OMITTED], recommended as filially pious and incorrupt. The eldest
daughter was Jiang [OMITTED], followed in order by Tuo [OMITTED], Dao [OMITTED], Rong
[OMITTED], and the empress. The empress was born during the Han on a
dingyou [OMITTED] day in the twelfth month of Guanghe [OMITTED] 5 [26
January 183]. Every time she went to sleep, her family seemed to see
something like a person bringing a jade garment to cover her, and they
often marveled at it together. When Yi died, she added [her little voice]
to the keening and wailing,[44] and those within and without the family
increasingly regarded her as special. Later, when the physiognomist Liu
Liang [OMITTED] examined the empress and other children, he pointed to
her and said, "The exalted status of this girl shall be inexpressible."
From the time she was little until she was grown, the empress never
liked frivolity. When she was eight, someone performed outside by
riding standing up on a horse. The people in the household and all her
older sisters went up to the gallery to watch it. Only the empress did
not go along. All her older sisters thought this was odd and asked her
why. She replied, "A woman should not watch such things." When she
was nine, she enjoyed writing, and whenever she saw a character, she
always recognized it. She often used her elder brothers' brushes and
inkstones, and they said to her, "You ought to learn women's work. Do
you think all this writing and study will make you a woman erudite?"
The empress replied, "I have heard that, of the worthy women of
antiquity, there was never one who did not study the successes and
failures of former times in order to admonish herself. If one does not
understand writing, how can one examine these?"


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[H]

The Wei Epitome says: When the empress was fourteen, she lost her
middle elder brother Yan, and her sorrow continued beyond the
stipulated mourning period. In serving her widowed sister-in-law, she
was humble and respectful. Managing and dealing with the work and
solicitously caring for Yan's child, her affection and love were very
great. The empress's mother was by nature stern and had norms for
treating all her daughters-in-law. The empress often remonstrated with
her mother, saying, "My elder brother unfortunately died early. Sister-in-law
is young to be a celibate widow and has been left with but a
single child.[45] Speaking in terms of moral obligations, you ought to
treat her like a daughter-in-law, and you should love her like a
daughter." Her mother was moved by the empress's words and shed

5.160
tears. She then ordered the empress and her sister-in-law to live
together. Whether sleeping or resting, sitting or rising, they were always
together, and their mutual affection grew increasingly deep.

In the Jian'an period, Yuan Shao obtained her for his middle
son Xi. When Xi went out to govern You province, the empress
remained behind to care for her mother-in-law.[46] When Ji province
was pacified, Emperor Wen married the empress in Ye.[47] She was
favored and gave birth to Emperor Ming and the Princess of
Dongxiang.[I] In the first month of Yankang [OMITTED] 1 [February/
March 220], Emperor Wen assumed the throne as king. In the
sixth month, he went on a military expedition south and the
empress remained in Ye. In the tenth month of Huangchu 1
[October/November 220], the emperor ascended the throne as
emperor.[48] Afterward, the Duke of Shanyang presented two
daughters in marriage to the Wei ruling house.[49] Empress Guo and
the Honorable Ladies Li and Yin were all loved and favored.[50] The
empress was increasingly discouraged and had fractious words. The
emperor became irate, and in the sixth month of the second year,
he sent an envoy to order her to commit suicide.[51] She was buried
in Ye.[J]

[I]

The Wei Epitome says: Xi went out to run You province, and the
empress remained behind to wait on her mother-in-law. When Ye's city
wall was breached, Shao's wife and the empress sat together in the
main hall. Emperor Wen entered Shao's residence and saw Shao's wife
and the empress.[52] As the empress, terrified, put her head on her
mother-in-law's lap, Shao's wife instinctively clutched her with her
hands. Emperor Wen said, "Lady Liu, what makes her thus? Have your
daughter-in-law lift her head." The mother-in-law then supported her
and made her look up. Emperor Wen approached and looked at her.


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Seeing that she was extraordinary, he sang her praises. When Cao Cao
learned how he felt, he brought her back as Emperor Wen's wife.[53]

The Conversations of the Eras says: When Cao Cao subjugated Ye,
Emperor Wen was first to enter Yuan Shang's compound. There was a
woman with disheveled hair and a dirty face standing behind Shao's
wife Liu shedding tears. Emperor Wen asked about her, and Liu
replied, "This is Xi's wife." Turning around, she gathered the woman's
hair and rubbed her face with a kerchief. Her good looks were
matchless. Once it was over, Liu said to the empress, "You don't need
to worry about dying now!" She was taken in marriage and was
favored.[54]

The Wei History says: The more the empress's favor grew, the more
she denigrated herself. She advised and encouraged those in the rear
palace who had favor, and consoled and instructed those who did not.[55]
She always took advantage of leisure times to exhort the emperor,
saying, "In former times the descendants of the Yellow Emperor were
born in great numbers. It was probably because his royal ladies were
multitudinous that he obtained this blessing. What I wish is for you to
search everywhere for ladies of chaste beauty to make your progeny
abundant." The emperor in his heart appreciated this.

Later, the emperor was about to banish Madam Ren, and the
empress implored him, "Ren is from a well-known clan of your
hometown, and her virtue and beauty are more than someone like me
can match. Why banish her?" The emperor said, "Ren is by nature
rash and impetuous and is not pleasant and agreeable. She has all in all
angered me more than once. This is why I am banishing her." The
empress, shedding tears, insistently implored, "Everyone knows that I
have received the favor of your esteemed attention. They will say Ren's
leaving is all my doing. Just as you fear criticism for being prejudicial, I
may have a hard time for being specially favored. I hope you will
reconsider!" The emperor did not heed her and sent Ren away.

In Jian'an 16 [211/212], Cao Cao led a military expedition to
Guanzhong [OMITTED], and Empress Bian the Celebrious of the Martial
Emperor went along [part of the way], stopping off at Mengjin [OMITTED].[56]
The emperor [Cao Pi] stayed behind in charge of Ye. At that time,
Empress Bian was in poor health and indisposed. The empress could
not periodically check on her and was so anxious and frightened that

5.161
she wept day and night. Her attendants repeatedly sent messengers to
ask about and report [on her improvement], but the empress still did
not believe it. She said, "When the consort was at home, every time
her old ailment flared up, it lasted for a time. How could she improve
so quickly now? You just want to put my mind at ease!" Later she

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received a return letter from Empress Bian which said that she had
already recovered from her ailment and had returned to normal. The
empress rejoiced.

In the first month of [Jian'an] 17 [February/March 212], the great
army returned to Ye, and the empress had an audience with Empress
Bian. When she gazed on her seated in her tent, she was both sad and
happy, which moved those in attendance. When Empress Bian saw the
empress like this, she, too, cried and said to her, "Were you upset over
my recent illness, as you were on former occasions? It only lasted for a
little while, and I was better in ten days or so. But don't look at my
face!" She sighed and said, "This is a truly filial daughter-in-law."

In [Jian'an] 21 [216/217], Cao Cao led a military expedition east.
Empress Bian, Emperor Wen, Emperor Ming, and Princess of
Dongxiang all accompanied him. At the time, the empress remained
in Ye due to illness.[57] In the ninth month of [Jian'an] 22 [October/
November 217], the great army returned. The attendants and courtiers
of Empress Bian noticed that the empress's face was plump and full.
They were surprised and asked, "Since the empress has been separated
from her two children for so long, and feelings for offspring cannot be
put out of one's consciousness, how is it that the empress's face is more
magnificent?" The empress smiled and answered them, "Since Rui and
the others were with the consort, what have I had to be anxious
about?" Such was the way the empress ably and intelligently used
propriety to maintain her composure.

[J]

The Wei History says: The officials concerned memorialized the throne
about naming a Palace of Prolonged Autumn.[58] The emperor sent a
letter bearing his seal inviting the empress to come to him. The
empress sent up a memorial stating,

I have heard that, from the beginning of the earliest
dynasties, the perpetuation of sacrifices to the state and the
handing down of blessings to descendants all were due to
empresses and consorts. Therefore, you must carefully select
such women in order to make moral education thrive in the
palace. Now, when you have just assumed the imperial throne,
you really should raise and promote a worthy and good
woman to take overall charge of the Six Palaces.[59] I consider
myself ignorant and lowly, not up to the offerings of grain-filled
vessels. Besides, I am sick in bed and dare not maintain
the slightest aspirations.

The sealed letter came three times and the empress thrice declined, her
words being very sincere. At the time it was the height of summer, so


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the emperor wanted to wait until the coolness of autumn before again
inviting the empress. But it happened that her illness became grave,
and that summer, on the dingmao [OMITTED] day of the sixth month [4
August 221], she died in Ye. The emperor sighed in sorrow and pain
and issued a patent bestowing on her the seal and ribbon of empress.

Your servant Songzhi understands the principles of the Spring and
Autumn Annals
to be that great evils within the palace are concealed,
while lesser evils are recorded.[60] We have clear knowledge of the fact.
that Emperor Wen did not make Madame Zhen empress and went so
far as to kill her. If the Wei historians[61] considered this to be a great
evil, they should have concealed it and not spoken of it. If they
considered it a lesser evil, then they should not have written falsely
about it. Such revering of embellished and untrue texts is alien to what
we learn from the old historians. If we were to judge from this, then
whenever the historians praised the goodness of the words and deeds of
the empresses Bian and Zhen, they would be difficult to find credible.
Chen Shou's abridgements and omissions truly have some basis.

When Emperor Ming assumed the throne, the officials concerned
memorialized, requesting to bestow a title on her posthumously, so
the emperor sent Minister of Works (sikong [OMITTED]) Wang Lang [OMITTED]
[OMITTED], commissioned with a verge and offering a patent, to make the
announcement to the shrine at her tumulus by means of a Great
Sacrifice.[62] He also separately established a temple.[K] In the third
month of Taihe 1 [April/May 227], he posthumously awarded
[Zhen] Yi a thousand households of Ancheng [OMITTED] district,
Weichang [OMITTED] prefecture in Zhongshan, and gave him the
posthumous title Attentive Marquis.[63] His legitimate grandson
Xiang [OMITTED] inherited the rank. In the fourth month [May/June], they
first began to lay out the [Wei] ancestral temple. They excavated
the earth and found a jade seal 1.9 cun square.[64] Its inscription
read, "The Son of Heaven Longingly Misses His Mother."
Emperor Ming blanched over this and reported it to the imperial

5.162
temple by means of a Great Sacrifice. He also once saw the
empress in a dream. Thereupon, he ranked the members of his
maternal uncles' family on the basis of how close they were and
their status, and employed them accordingly. His gifts to them
reached gigantic proportions. He made Xiang general of the
gentlemen-of-the-household rapid as tigers. That month the
empress's mother died, and the emperor put on sackcloth and
attended the funeral, with the members of officialdom
accompanying him.


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In the eleventh month of Taihe 4 [December 230/January 231],
because the empress's old tumulus was too low, he sent Xiang,
concurrently serving as grand commandant (taiwei [OMITTED]) and
commissioned with a verge, to go to Ye and make a public
announcement to the God of Earth. In the twelfth month
[January/February 231], they reinterred her at Zhaoyang Tumulus
(Zhaoyang ling [OMITTED]).[65] When Xiang returned, he was
transferred to be cavalier attendant in regular attendance. In the
spring of Qinglong [OMITTED] 2 [234], the emperor bestowed the
posthumous title Serene Marquis (Mu hou [OMITTED]) of Ancheng
district on the empress's elder brother Yan. In the summer, the Wu
bandits pillaged Yang province [OMITTED]. Xiang was made billowsubduing
general (fubo jiangjun [OMITTED]) and, commissioned
with a verge, supervised all the generals on a military expedition
east. Upon returning, he was also made colonel of archers who
shoot by sound (shesheng xiaowei [OMITTED]). In [Qinglong] 3
[235/236], he died. He was posthumously presented with the title
general of the guards, had his benefice changed to Weichang
prefecture, and was given the posthumous title Pure Marquis
(Zhen hou [OMITTED]). His son Chang [OMITTED] succeeded him. Chang's
younger brothers Wen [OMITTED], Wei [OMITTED], and Yan [OMITTED] were all appointed
full marquises. In [Qinglong] 4 [236/237], the original benefices of
[Empress Zhen's father] Yi and [her brother] Yan were changed
and both were called Marquis of Weichang, but their posthumous
names remained as before. Yan's wife Liu [OMITTED] was made countess
of Dong district (Dongxiang jun [OMITTED]), and Yi's wife Zhang was
posthumously made countess of Anxi (Anxi jun [OMITTED]).[66]

[K]

The Wei History contains a memorial of the Three Dukes, which says:[67]

In general, the way of filial piety and respect is to be devoted
to one's family. It is that by means of which the lands within
the four seas are civilized, that by means of which Heaven
and Earth are understood and observed.[68] What this refers to
is seeing to their support when they are alive, glorifying their
spirits when they are dead, telling of them to fully convey
their excellence, and exalting them to make their names
renowned. Now Your Majesty, because of Your sage and fine
virtue, continues the magnificent enterprise. Your perfect filial
piety rises thickly and communes with the gods. Enmeshed in
deep grief, You always strive to be modestly deferential. When
the former emperor was moved to his divine tumulus, a great
ceremony was prepared, but as for the former empress, she


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does not yet have an illustrious posthumous title. We humbly
consider that the former empress's respectful deference was
obvious in her obscurity, and her perfect behavior was
manifest in her silence. Her civilizing influence circulated in
the country, and her virtue equaled that of the "Two Nan."[69]
Therefore, she was able to receive auspicious signs from
divine spirits and become the first royal wife of the Great
Wei. Although she will have passed away long before, myriad
years from now people will everlastingly spread her shining
brilliance. None of the achievements of empresses and
consorts will be able to surpass hers. According to the
standards for posthumous titles, "When one's sage reputation
extends everywhere, one is called zhao [OMITTED] [`illustrious'] and
when one's virtue is bright and one has achievements, one is
called zhao."[70] Zhao is the quintessence of brightness,
something that is not diminished even after a great length of
time. It would be fitting for the Emperor to honor her with
the posthumous title the Illustrious Empress of the Civilizing
Emperor.

That month the Three Dukes again memorialized:

From ancient times, the people of Zhou first made Lord
Millet their ancestor and set up a temple to worship Jiang
Yuan.[71] Now, as for the effect of the Illustrious Empress of
the Civilizing Emperor on myriad later generations, how can
her sage virtue and perfect influence be measured? She had
the honor due the first royal wife of the imperial family, yet
was disarmingly deferential and sincerely respectful.[72] She
firmly rejected grandiose status until her divine soul was
transformed [by death], but for her not to have a temple to
receive and enjoy sacrifices is not the way to reward her
eminent virtue or to make your filial respect apparent.
Looking it up in the old regulations, it is fitting, according to
the Rites of Zhou, to establish a temple for a deceased
mother.[73]

He approved both memorials.

In the summer of the first year of the Jingchu reign period
[237], the officials concerned suggested establishing seven temples.[74]
In the winter they also memorialized, saying:

In general, when an emperor or king arises, there is both a ruler
who has received the mandate and a sage consort who is


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agreeable to the divine spirits. Only then can the ruler make his
age prosper and complete the royal enterprise. Of old, Gaoxin
shi [OMITTED] divined that the sons of his four wives would all
possess the world, and hence Di Zhi [OMITTED], Tao Tang [OMITTED],
5.163
Shang, and Zhou arose in turn.[75] The people of Zhou reached
back to Lord Millet and thereby worshiped him together with
august Heaven. Tracing and recounting his kingly beginnings,
they found his origins in Jiang Yuan and specially established a
temple where, generation after generation, they offered sacrifices
to her. This is what the Rites of Zhou refers to by "Play the yize
[OMITTED], sing the zhonglü [OMITTED], dance the grand huo [OMITTED] in order
to make an offering to the ancestral mother."[76] The poets
eulogized her, saying, "She who in the beginning gave birth to
our people [of Zhou], / This was Jiang Yuan."[77] This means she
was the root of the king's civilizing influence, the source which
gave birth to his people. Further, they say, "Silent was the Closed
Hall, / Solid and closely timbered. / Majestic was Jiang Yuan, /
Flawless her virtue."[78] The magnificence of the Ji ancestors
praised by the [Classic of] Poetry and the Rites [of Zhou] was
as beautiful as this.

The Great Wei has come round at its appointed time and
inherited from Youyu [OMITTED].[79] In exalting and spreading the
imperial way, however, the Three Generations have been even
more eminent.[80] The number of temples is actually the same as
in Zhou times. Now Empress Bian the Celebrious of the Martial
Emperor and Empress Guo the Virtuous of the Civilizing
Emperor (Wen De Guo huanghou [OMITTED]) each share in
inexhaustible blessings. As for Empress Zhen the Illustrious of
the Civilizing Emperor, she received Heaven's numinous sign and
gave birth to and raised the enlightened sage. Her achievement
saved the people, and her virtue filled the universe. She began all
the later generations and so is the starting point for moral
civilization. Special sacrifices at a temple would be taken as
another Closed Hall of Jiang Yuan. But since we have not yet
made known an irrevocable rule, we fear that myriad later
generations will be deficient concerning the principles of
evaluating merit and rewarding virtue. This is not the way to
make Your filial respect known and to demonstrate it to later
generations. At Empress Zhen's temple it would be appropriate
to offer sacrifices and play music for generation after generation,
just as at the ancestral temple. Make forever known an
irrevocable statute in order to spread Your zephyr of holy
goodness.


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Thereupon, it was engraved with the petition for the seven temples
on golden slips and placed in a golden chest.

The emperor thought incessantly about his maternal uncles'
families. [Zhen] Chang was still a child, but at the end of the
Jingchu period, he was made colonel of archers who shoot by
sound and additionally made cavalier attendant in regular
attendance. The emperor also specially erected a great mansion for
him and personally visited it. Furthermore, in its rear garden he
erected a lodge and temple for Xiang's mother. He named the
ward Weiyang [OMITTED] ward to commemorate his mother's family.[81]
In the first month of Jiaping [OMITTED] 3 [February/March 251], Chang
died. He was posthumously awarded the title of general of chariots
and cavalry (juji jiangjun [OMITTED]) and given the posthumous
name Respectful Marquis. His son Shao [OMITTED] succeeded him. In
Taihe 6 [232/233], Emperor Ming's beloved daughter Shu [OMITTED]
died.[82] He gave her the posthumous appointment and name
Exemplary Princess of Pingyuan (Pingyuan Yi gongzhu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) and established a temple for her.[83] He selected the empress's
deceased grandnephew [Zhen] Huang to be buried with her and
posthumously appointed him a full marquis. He made Lady Guo's
younger cousin [Guo] De their offspring, and having him take the
surname Zhen, appointed him marquis of Pingyuan and let him
inherit the princess's noble rank.[L] In the Qinglong period, he also
appointed Yi [OMITTED], who was son of the empress's older cousin, and
Xiang's three younger brothers, making all of them full marquises.
Yi often sent up memorials expounding contemporary government
affairs, and he rose in office to be colonel of picked cavalry (yueji
xiaowei
[OMITTED]). During the Jiaping period, he also appointed
Chang's two sons full marquises. The granddaughter of the
empress's elder brother Yan became empress of the king of Qi.[84]
The empress's father had already died, but her mother was
appointed countess of Guangle district (Guangle xiangjun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]).

[L]

5.164
Sun Sheng [OMITTED] [fl. ca. 350] says: If there are no statutes for the
appointment and ennoblement of wives in the rites, this is even more
so for their children, so how can they be established in great benefices?
De was from a different clan, yet he was brought in to carry on
another family. He was neither meritorious nor closely related, but he
inherited his [posthumously adoptive] mother's noble rank. Defying
feelings and disregarding statutes were at their worst here. Although
Chen Qun spoke in opposition and Yang Fu [OMITTED] cited events to serve
as analogies, neither was able to expound to their full extent the rites of

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the former kings and make clear the principles of appointment and
inheritance.[85] Words whose sincerity is perfect may still have
shortcomings! The Classic of Poetry says, "Awe-inspiring are you, O
[Grand-] master Yin,/And the people all look to you!"[86] The top
executive officials might as well be done away with!

Encomia on the Dukes of Jin (Jin zhugong zan [OMITTED])[87] says: De's
appellative was Yansun [OMITTED]. When King Jing of the Sima family was
ruling as regent, he married his daughter to De. She died early, and
King Wen gave him a daughter for his next wife; this was Senior
Princess of the Capital (Jingzhao zhang gongzhu [OMITTED]). Kings
Jing and Wen wanted to tie themselves to Empress Guo and because of
this frequently made such marriages. Although De lacked talent and
learning, he was respectfully reverent and humbly compliant. Zhen Wen
[OMITTED], appellative Zhongshu [OMITTED], together with Guo Jian [OMITTED], De,
and others, all were of the empress's clan and were favored as a matter
of policy. At the beginning of the Xianxi [OMITTED] period [264], Guo Jian
was appointed duke of Linwei prefecture (Linwei xian gong [OMITTED])
and De as duke of Guang'an prefecture (Guang'an xian gong [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]), each with a benefice of eighteen hundred households. Wen was
originally a marquis with a state. He was promoted to general-in-chief
who supports the state (fuguo da jiangjun [OMITTED]),[88] serving also
as palace attendant and concurrent colonel of archers who shoot by
sound, and De was made general-in-chief of the subduing army
(zhenjun da jiangjun [OMITTED]).[89] In Taishi 1 [265/266], Jin
accepted the abdication [of Cao Huan] and promoted Jian, Wen, and
De with great rapidity.[90] As a man, De was upright and pure and, in
addition, was the husband of the Succedent Progenitor's elder sister.[91]
Because of this, he was esteemed at that time. In De's later years, his
post was again changed to director of the imperial clan (zong zheng [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]), and he was transferred to palace attendant.

In the Taikang period [280-289], Commander-in-Chief (da sima [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) You [OMITTED], King of Qi, was about to go to his benefice. De and
Left General of the Guards (zuo wei jiangjun [OMITTED]) Wang Ji [OMITTED]
jointly remonstrated and petitioned [that he remain], and their
contemporaries admired them. The Succedent Progenitor blamed De
for this. Consequently, he sent him out to be grand herald (da honglu
[OMITTED]), and made him concurrent palace attendant and imperial
household grandee.[92] Soon De became ill and died. The emperor gave
him the titles general-in-chief of the Middle Army (zhong jun da
jiangjun
[OMITTED])[93] and palatine palace attendant (kaifu shizhong [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]), as before. He was posthumously named the Respectful Duke,
and his son Xi [OMITTED] succeeded him. Xi was refined and pure and had


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the virtue of magnanimity. He served as gentleman of the Palace
Writers, right general of the guards, and palace attendant, and he rose
to be general-in-chief who supports the state, to which was added
cavalier attendant in regular attendance. Xi was close to the throne by
marriage. That he got through the incidents involving Lun, King of
Zhao [OMITTED], and Jiong, King of Qi [OMITTED], and was able to remain
uninvolved at this juncture was really because he was considered short
on talent.[94] But he also avoided them by withdrawal and quietude.

Empress Guo the Virtuous of the Civilizing Emperor had her home
of record in Guangzong [OMITTED] in Anping [OMITTED].[95] Her forebears
were senior subalterns (zhang li [OMITTED]).[M] When the empress was
young, her father Young [OMITTED] thought she was extraordinary and
said, "This is the queen of my daughters," so he gave her the
appellative Queenie. She lost both parents at an early age and
drifted about in the death and disorder of the times, coming to
rest in the household of the marquis of Tongdi [OMITTED].[96] When the
Grand Progenitor was Duke of Wei, she was able to enter the
Eastern Palace.[97] The empress was a shrewd strategist and from
time to time offered advice [to Cao Pi]. When he was designated
the successor, she had a hand in planning it. Once he had assumed
the royal throne, the empress was made lady, and when he
assumed the imperial throne, she was made honored concubine.
The death of Empress Zhen resulted from the favor shown
Empress Guo. In Huangchu 3 [222/223], Emperor Wen was about
to name an empress, and he wanted to designate her. Gentleman-of-the-Household
Zhan Qian presented a memorial:

5.165
When the emperors and kings of yore governed the empire, they
not only had assistance without, they also had help within. From
this proceeds order or disorder, and rise or fall come from it.
Thus Xiling [OMITTED] was spouse to the Yellow Emperor, and Ying
[OMITTED] and E [OMITTED] married Gui, who was below their station.[98] All of
them were thereby worthy and enlightened and spread their
fragrances through the ancient ages. When Jie fled to Nanchao,
the disaster stemmed from Moxi.[99] Zhou used the punishment of
roasting alive to give joy and delight to Daji.[100] Hence, sage
wisdom exercises circumspection in setting up a principal
consort. One must select from the household of an eminent clan
of former ages, and pick an outstanding maiden to control the
Six Palaces, make reverent offerings at the imperial temples, and
cultivate the feminine civilizing influence. The Changes says,
"When the way of the family is correct, the empire is settled.[101]

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From within to without was the excellent precept of the former
kings. The Spring and Autumn Annals writes that Ancestral
Intendant (zong ren [OMITTED]) Xin Xia [OMITTED] said there is no rite for
making a concubine a lady.[102] [Duke] Huan [OMITTED] of Qi swore an
oath at Kuiqiu [OMITTED], also saying, "Do not make a concubine
your wife.[103] At present, the favorite from the rear palace is often
second only to the emperor. If for love's sake you promote her
to empress, causing someone of humble station to become
suddenly noble, I fear that, should in later ages inferiors be
usurpative and superiors be set aside, then the turmoil will have
originated with Your Highness.[104]

The emperor did not heed his advice and subsequently made her
empress.[N]

[M]

The Wei History says: Her father Yong rose in office to hold the post of
grand administrator of Nan commandery [OMITTED] and was posthumously
named Attentive Marquis. Her mother, surnamed Dong [OMITTED], was
countess of Tangyang [Tangyang jun [OMITTED]] and gave birth to three
boys and two girls. The eldest boy was Fu [OMITTED], who was prefect of
Gaotang [OMITTED]. Next was the girl Yu [OMITTED] and next was the empress. The
empress's younger brothers were Du [OMITTED] and Cheng [OMITTED]. The empress
was born during the Han on an yimao [OMITTED] day in the third month of
Zhongping [OMITTED] 1 [8 April 184]. From birth there was something
extraordinary about her.

[N]

The Wei History says: The empress sent up a memorial saying:

I lack the integrity of Huang and Ying's marrying below their
station, and I am not one to hope to emulate Jiang and
Ren.[105] I am really inadequate to be relied on to fill the grand
position of woman ruler and to manage the important duties
of your household.

From the time the empress was in the Eastern Palace until she
assumed the venerable throne, even though she was extraordinarily
favored, her heart was increasingly respectful. She cared for the Palace
of Eternal Longevity [Empress Dowager Bian] and was famous for her
filial piety. At that time, Honorable Lady Chai [Chai guiren [OMITTED]]
also was favored, and the empress taught and trained, encouraged and
guided her. When there was some lapse on the part of the worthy
ladies of the rear palace, she always covered it up. When one of them
was reprimanded, she always explained the ins and outs of the affair to
the emperor. If perhaps he were greatly angered by someone, she


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would even kowtow and appeal for leniency for the lady's sake. Because
of this, the Six Palaces had no enmity toward her. By nature she was
frugal and economical. She did not like music and always admired the
way Empress Ma the Virtuous of the Enlightened Emperor [OMITTED]
of Han times comported herself.[106]

The empress lost her brothers early, and Yong's line was carried
on by her elder cousin Biao [OMITTED], who was made chief commandant
of imperial equipages. The empress's maternal relative Liu Fei
[OMITTED] married into another kingdom. When the empress heard of
it, she cautioned, "In marrying, all my relatives naturally should
make matches with families in their own hometowns and should
not utilize their position to force marriage with people of other
places." The empress's elder sister's son, Meng Wu [OMITTED], returned
to his hometown and sought a concubine, but the empress stopped
him. Subsequently, she cautioned all of her family: "In the present
age, there are too few women, so they should pair up with the
officers and men. One cannot use some pretext to take them as
concubines. It is appropriate for each of you to be circumspect and
not be the first to get punished."[O]

[O]

5.166
The Wei History says: The empress often cautioned and warned Biao,
Wu, and others, saying, "The reasons the families of the pepper rooms
of the Han house were seldom able to keep themselves intact were
always pride and excess.[107] You must be circumspect!"

In [Huangchu] 5 [224/225], the emperor went east on a military
expedition, and the empress remained behind at the Terrace of
Perpetual Beginning in Xuchang.[108] At this time it poured rain for
over a hundred days, and the city walls and towers were much
damaged. The officials concerned asked her to move elsewhere.
The empress replied:

Of old, King Zhao of Chu [OMITTED] went out traveling and Jiang
the Chaste (Zhen Jiang [OMITTED]) remained behind at Jian Terrace
(Jian tai [OMITTED]). When the waters of the Yangtze came, an envoy
arrived, but since he had no verge, she would not leave, and
drowned.[109] Now the emperor is far away. If I were simply to up
and move elsewhere, even though I have been fortunate enough
not to experience such adversity, what then?

None of the officials dared say anything more. In [Huangchu] 6
[225/226], the emperor went east on a military expedition against


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Wu. He got as far as Guangling [OMITTED], while the empress remained
behind at Qiao Palace.[110] At this time, Biao remained behind in the
imperial bodyguards. He wanted to stem the river's flow to get
fish.[111] The empress said:

The river is meant to freely transport supplies. Besides, there is
too little timber, and servants are not available. You would also
need to take state-owned bamboo and wood for your personal
use to make the dam. But now, Commandant of Equipages,
whatever it is that you find you lack, how can it be fish?

When Emperor Ming ascended the throne, he honored the
empress as empress dowager and designated her Palace of Eternal
Peace (Yongan gong [OMITTED]). In Taihe 4 [230/231], by edict he
appointed Biao marquis of Anyang commune (Anyang ting hou
[OMITTED]), then advanced his rank to district marquis. The added
households, when combined with what he had before, totaled five
hundred. He was transferred to be general of the capital rampart
(zhong lei jiangjun [OMITTED]). Biao's son Xiang [OMITTED] was made chief
commandant of cavalry (ji duwei [OMITTED]). That year, the emperor
posthumously named the empress dowager's father Yong the
Attentive Marquis of Anyang district (Anyang xiang Jing hou [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) and her mother Dong countess of the capital district (du
xiang jun
[OMITTED]). Biao was transferred to be general of brilliant
virtue (zhaode jiangjun [OMITTED]), awarded an honorary gold
[seal] and purple [cord], and designated Specially Advanced (te jin
[OMITTED]). Biao's second son Xun [OMITTED] was made chief commandant of
cavalry. When Meng Wu's mother died, he wanted to give her an
elaborate burial and erect a shrine, but the empress dowager
stopped him, saying, "Since the death and disorder began, there is
no tomb that has not been dug up, all because of elaborate
burials. Let Shouyang Tumulus (Shouyang ling [OMITTED]) be your
model."

In the spring of Qinglong 3 [235/236], the empress died in
Xuchang.[112] They built her tumulus in accordance with her last
will, and on the gengyin [OMITTED] day in the third month [16 April
235], she was buried west of Shouyang Tumulus.[P] The emperor
advanced Biao's noble rank to marquis of Guanjin (Guanjin hou
[OMITTED]) and increased his benefice by five hundred households,
bringing the total to one thousand. Xiang was transferred to be
chief commandant of attendant cavalry (fuma duwei [OMITTED]).
In the fourth year [236/237], Yong had his appointment posthumously
changed to Attentive Marquis of Guanjin (Guanjin Jing


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hou [OMITTED]), and his hereditary consort Dong was made
countess of Tangyang. The empress's elder brothers were
posthumously ennobled, Fu as Venerated Marquis of Liangli
commune (Liangli ting Dai hou [OMITTED]), Du as Filial Marquis
of Wucheng commune (Wucheng ting Xiao hou [OMITTED]), and
Cheng as Reassuring Marquis of Xinle commune (Xinle ting Ding
hou [OMITTED]). In every case an envoy was sent to present a
patent and offer a Great Sacrifice. When Biao died, his son Xiang
succeeded him, Biao's benefice was divided, and Xiang's younger
brother Shu [OMITTED] was appointed a full marquis. When Xiang died,
his son Zhao [OMITTED] succeeded him.

[P]

The Wei Epitome says: After Emperor Ming ascended the throne, he
was pained by the memory of Empress Zhen's death; therefore,
Empress Dowager [Guo] died unexpectedly from worry. When
Empress Zhen was near death, she had placed the emperor under the
care of Lady Li. Once the empress dowager had died, Lady Li

5.167
explained the harm done by Empress Zhen's being slandered, that she
was not properly coffined, and that her disheveled hair covered her
face.[113] The emperor shed tears in his sorrow and regret and
commanded that in the funeral and burial of the empress dowager all
be done as in the case of Empress Zhen.[114]

The Han-Jin Spring and Autumn says: Earlier, the killing of Empress
Zhen stemmed from the favoritism shown Empress Guo, and when she
was buried, they let her disheveled hair cover her face and stuffed her
mouth with chaff. Subsequently Empress Guo was made empress and
charged with raising Emperor Ming.[115] The emperor was aware of this,
and in his heart always harbored resentment. He often tearfully
inquired about the circumstances of Empress Zhen's demise. Empress
Guo replied, "The late emperor killed her. Why blame me? Besides,
may a child carry a grudge against his deceased father and wrongly kill
his stepmother because of his natural mother?" Emperor Ming was
angry and subsequently hounded her to death. In ordering her funeral,
he had them do as previously in the case of Empress Zhen.[116]

The Wei History contains the tablet of lament which says: In the third
month of Qinglong 3,[117] on the renshen day,[118] with the empress
dowager in a catalpa coffin, the funeral procession to bury her at
Western Tumulus (Xiling [OMITTED]) at Shouyang will begin. Her bereaved
son Rui, the emperor, personally presented the tablet and performed
the sacrifice to initiate the funeral. Next, he personally made the
offerings to send off the departed. Striking his heart, he beat his breast
and stamped his feet; loudly crying, he looked up and appealed:


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I am pained at the soul's journeying abroad,

Sad at the hearse's facing the road.

She has turned her back on the Three Luminaries to conceal
herself;[119]

Drawing nigh the Yellow Earth, she shall be placed in the
crypt.[120]

Alas! Alack!

Of old,

The two daughters were consorts to Yu,[121]

And his imperial way was thereby distinguished;

The three mothers married Zhou rulers,[122]

And sage goodness attained full brightness.

Since these rulers received so much good fortune,

They enjoyed the prolongation of their kingdoms.

Alack! Alack! My late loving Mother

Brought transformation to the women's apartments,

Flew dragonlike to the Purple Bourne,[123]

From the start cooperated with the sage sovereign,

And did not expect in middle age

Suddenly to encounter catastrophy.

Pity me, the little child,

All alone, crushed and wounded.

Her soul is forever gone.

How can I hope to pay her morning and evening courtesies?

Alas! Alack!

Empress Mao the Lamented of the Enlightened Emperor (Ming
Dao Mao huanghou [OMITTED]) had Henei as her home of
record.[124] During the Huangchu period, she entered the Eastern
Palace by selection. At the time, Emperor Ming was king of
Pingyuan [OMITTED]. On going in and giving herself to the emperor,
she won his favor, and she shared a carriage with him going and
coming. When he assumed the imperial throne, he took her to be
his honored concubine. In Taihe 1 [227], he established her as
empress.[125] Her father Jia [OMITTED] was made chief commandant of
cavalry, and her younger brother Zeng [OMITTED] gentleman-of-the-palace
(lang zhong [OMITTED]).

Earlier, when Emperor Ming was a prince, he first took Madam
Yu of Henei as his consort. When he became emperor and
Madame Yu was not made empress, Grand Empress Dowager
Bian consoled and encouraged her. Madame Yu said:

The Caos have always been fond of establishing the inferior.
They have never been able to promote someone on the basis of


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what was right. Yet an empress manages affairs within, and the
ruler attends to governing without. Their ways complement each
other, so if they are unable to get off to a good start, they will
never be able to end well. I fear that because of this they will
surely ruin the state and let the sacrifices die out!

Madam Yu subsequently was demoted and returned to the Ye
Palace. Jia was advanced to be chief commandant of imperial
equipages and Zeng to chief commandant of cavalry, and their
gifts as favorites were bountiful and substantial. Before long, Jia
was appointed marquis of Boping district (Boping xiang hou [OMITTED]
[OMITTED])[126] and transferred to imperial household grandee, and Zeng
became chief commandant of attendant cavalry. Jia originally was
a carriage maker (che gong [OMITTED]) under the chief commandant of
waters and parks.[127] When he suddenly became rich and noble,
Emperor Ming ordered the court officers to assemble at Jia's home
for symposia.[128] Jia's demeanor and his behavior were very stupid
and foolish, and when he spoke, he always referred to himself as
"the Lordly Person."[129] People of the time thought he was a

5.168
joke.[Q] Later, Jia was awarded the designation Specially Advanced.
Zeng was transferred to cavalier gentleman-in-attendance. In
Qinglong 3, Jia died. He was posthumously accorded the office of
imperial household grandee, and had his appointment changed to
marquis of An state (An guo hou [OMITTED]), with an increase of five
hundred households, which, added to what he had before, brought
the total to one thousand. He was posthumously named the
Decent Marquis (Jie hou [OMITTED]). In [Qinglong] 4 [236/237], the
empress's mother Xia [OMITTED] was appointed countess of Yewang
(Yewang jun [OMITTED]).

[Q]

Sun Sheng says: The kings of antiquity made sure to seek excellent
maidens in order to match and glorify their own perfect virtue. They
extended royal transformation through "Guan ju" and brought about
simple customs through "Lin zhi."[130] The last rulers of the Xia, Shang,
and Zhou periods disturbed this thread; righteousness was drowned by
passion, status was muddled by favoritism, noble and inferior lacked
order, and the low ascended and the high declined. Rise or fall, success
or failure all are in this thing. During the Wei, beginning with King
Wu and extending down to the Illustrious Ancestor,[131] the empresses of
all three rulers arose from obscure and inferior positions. Since their
origins were humble, how could they be used to perpetuate the line?
The [Classic of] Poetry lines "Fine linen and coarse, / Cool they are
because of the wind" probably refer to such a case![132]


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From the time the emperor began to favor Empress Guo, the
love and favor shown Empress Mao diminished daily. In Jingchu
1 [237/238], the emperor was touring the rear garden and
summoned those of the rank of lady of talents and above to a
private feast to enjoy themselves fully. Empress Guo said, "It
would be fitting to invite the empress." But the emperor would
not allow it. He then prohibited those about him from mentioning
it so that it would not be made known. But the empress learned
of it, and the next day when the emperor saw her, she asked,
"Were the outing and feast yesterday in the northern garden fun?"
The emperor assumed that those about him had leaked it, and
more than ten people were killed. The empress was allowed to
commit suicide, but she was still given a posthumous name and
buried at Min Tumulus (Minling [OMITTED]).[133] Zeng was transferred to
become cavalier attendant in regular attendance,[134] and was later
shifted to general of the gentlemen-of-the-household rapid as tigers
and of the feathered forest (yulin huben zhonglang jiang [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]), and [colonel] director of agriculture for Yuanwu
(Yuanwu diannong [OMITTED]).[135]

Empress Guo the Paramount of the Enlightened Emperor (Ming
Yuan Guo huanghou [OMITTED]) had her home of record in
Xiping [OMITTED].[136] For generations, hers was a great clan in Heyou
[OMITTED].[137] In the Huangchu period, her home commandery rebelled,
so she was impressed into the palace. When Emperor Ming
assumed the throne, she was greatly loved and favored and was
appointed lady. Her father's younger brother Li [OMITTED] became chief
commandant of cavalry, and her paternal uncle Zhi [OMITTED] became
general of the gentlemen-of-the-household rapid as tigers. When
the emperor was stricken with illness, she was established as
empress.[138] When the King of Qi [Cao Fang] assumed the throne,
he honored the empress as empress dowager and designated her
Palace of Eternal Peace. He posthumously appointed and named
the empress dowager's father Man [OMITTED] the Reassuring Marquis of
the Western Capital (Xi du Ding hou [OMITTED]) and had Li's son
Jian carry on the noble rank. He appointed the empress dowager's
mother Du [OMITTED] countess of Geyang (Geyang jun [OMITTED]). Zhi was
transferred to cavalier attendant in regular attendance and colonel
of the Chang River encampment (Chang shui xiaowei [OMITTED]),[R]
and Li to general of manifest virtue (xuan de jiangjun [OMITTED]).
Both were appointed full marquises. Jian's older brother De was
raised by the Zhen family. De and Jian were both generals for
garrison defense (zhenhu jiangjun [OMITTED]) and each was


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appointed a full marquis. Together they were in charge of the
imperial bodyguards. It happened that three rulers in a row were
minors, and the top executive officials controlled the government
and settled great affairs with them. They always checked with or
5.169
informed the empress dowager before taking any action.[139] When
Guanqiu Jian [OMITTED], Zhong Hui [OMITTED], and others rebelled, they
all did so in her name.[140] She died in the twelfth month of
Jingyuan [OMITTED]4 [January/February 264]. In the second month of
[Jingyuan] 5 [March/April 264], she was buried on the west of
Gaoping Tumulus (Gaoping ling [OMITTED]).[S]

[R]

The Wei Epitome says: Of all the Guos, Zhi was the most vigorous and
upright. At an earlier time he himself had been appointed a marquis for
some other deed of merit.

[S]

Encomia on the Dukes of Jin says: Jian's appellative was Shushi [OMITTED].
He had ability and was strongly inquisitive. He died of illness in the
Taishi period [265-275]. His son Jia [OMITTED] succeeded him and became a
palace steward.

The evaluation says: Although the families of the Wei empresses
and consorts may be said to have been rich and noble, there were
not any who took advantage of what was not their rightful
position to carve up the court's administration. Admirable it is to
take the past as a mirror for changing one's course. In retrospect,
Chen Qun's argument and Zhan Qian's theory are perfectly
sufficient to be canons for all kings and to provide a model for
later generations.

 
[1]

These lines are quoted from the Classic of Changes, Hexagram 37, "Tuan
zhuan" [OMITTED] [Commentary on the Decision]. Cf. Wilhelm, I Ching, 570. See
also Wilhelm, Heaven, Earth, and Man in the Book of Changes, 86; Klöpsch,
" `Bird in a Cage,' `Jade in the Mire,' " 238. We discuss "inner and outer"
spheres of activity in Chapter 2 above. A good discussion of the concept as
it existed in later times is Ebrey, The Inner Quarters, 23-29.

[2]

Yu is the culture hero Shun, who lived near the stream Gui: "All (giving =)
to the emperor said: There is an unmarried man (below =) in a low position,
called Shun of Yu. The emperor said: Yes, I have heard (of him): what is he
like? (Si) Yue said: He is the son of a blind man; his father was stupid, his
mother was deceitful, (his brother) Xiang was arrogant; he has been able to
be concordant and to be grandly filial; he has controlled himself and has not
come to wickedness. The emperor said: I will try him; I will wive him, and
observe his behaviour towards my two daughters. He (regulated, arranged =)
directed and sent down his two daughters to the nook of the Gui river, to be
wives in the Yu (house). The emperor said: Be reverent!" (Karlgren, "The Book
of Documents," 4). See also Karlgren, "Glosses on the Book of Documents,"
69-71. For more on the lore surrounding Yao's daughters, see note 98 below
and Yuan, Zhongguo shenhua chuanshuo cidian, 149. Ji was the surname of
the Zhou ruling house. Ren was the name of the mother of King Wen of Zhou,
and Si was the name of the mother of King Wu of Zhou.

[3]

Lu Bi notes that Chunqiu: Bao qian tu [OMITTED] [Apocryphon to the Spring
and Autumn Annals: Schema for Preserving Qian] says that "only the Son of
Heaven takes twelve wives" (Sgz jijie, 5.1b). See also Tjan, Po hu t'ung, 1:251252,
349n. 466. The latter indicates that both the Son of Heaven and the nobles
might take nine wives at a time but also points out that some held the emperor
might take twelve. On the number of wives the Son of Heaven should have,
see Chapter 3, note 40.

That San guo zhi here writes Chunqiu shuo [OMITTED] is something of a


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mystery. The only apocryphon with a similar title is Chunqiu: Shuo ti ci [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] [Apocryphon to the Spring and Autumn Annals: Explaining the
Themes and Words], and we have translated accordingly. However, the
surviving fragments of that work do not contain a similar passage. Perhaps
Chen Shou is referring to a lost portion of the Shuo ti ci or to some now
unknown work. Another possibility is that Chunqiu shuo is not a title at all,
but means instead "an explanation to the Spring and Autumn Annals," as
indicated by Dubs, who, however, was unsure.

[4]

Mengzi [OMITTED] 1B.5 says: "At that time there were neither girls pining for a
husband [yuannü [OMITTED]] nor men without a wife [kuangfu [OMITTED]]" (Lau,
Mencius, 66, brackets ours). The point here is that the huge size of the imperial
harems led both to a shortage of wives for the men of the empire and to
neglected women in the harem wishing for husbands of their own.

[5]

This sentence may mean something like "Only in the Taihe period, when he
named a new lady, did he raise her position above that of pure consort," or
"In the Taihe period when he first named a new lady, he raised her position
above that of pure consort." These latter interpretations offer more specificity
about the occasion, but we are not sure which of the three might be right.
The one adopted in the translation reflects our impression that the punctuation
in the Zhonghua shuju text may be misleading.

[6]

See Appendix I, Table 2.

[7]

The expression zhuhou wang is a generic term that ought simply to be
understood as wang [OMITTED] (king or prince). See, for example, Hucker, A Dictionary
of Official Titles in Imperial China,
no. 1384; Loewe, "The Orders of
Aristocratic Rank of Han China," 110; and Lin, Zhongguo lishi da cidian:
Qin Han shi,
374-375.

[8]

Kaiyang prefecture in Langye commandery was located just north of modern
Linyi [OMITTED] in Shandong province.

[9]

Qiao was in the vicinity of modern Bo [OMITTED] county in Anhui province.

[10]

One of the main anti-eunuch voices in the political machinations of 189 was
Yuan Shao. Yuan and General-in-Chief He Jin [OMITTED] (d. 189), half brother of
Empress Dowager He [OMITTED], wanted to exterminate the eunuchs, but she
opposed this. Yuan and others decided to intimidate her by having military
leaders bring their forces to the capital. One such army was lead by Dong Zhuo.

Dong was a seasoned military leader, and his advance caused the empress
dowager to dismiss all the eunuchs except those connected with He Jin. Yuan
Shao urged He to execute them all, but the latter refused. He Jin even demanded
that Dong stop his advance, and soon the eunuchs resumed their posts. But
on 22 September 189, He Jin had an audience with his sister in which he
requested permission to kill the eunuchs. The eunuchs were suspicious of his
visit to court. Having discovered what he was up to, they lured him back as
he was leaving and cut off his head. Anti-eunuch forces then went into action.
Leading eunuchs, taking along the empress dowager, the Young Emperor (Shao
di [OMITTED]; Liu Bian [OMITTED]), the emperor's younger brother Liu Xie [OMITTED], and
others, fled to the Northern Palace. The empress dowager slipped away from
the group en route. Yuan Shao's men are reported to have massacred more
than two thousand people at the palace, but the party leading the Young
Emperor escaped and fled the city. They were caught, and those eunuchs not
killed by the pursuers committed suicide.


194

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While the Young Emperor and Liu Xie were returning to Luoyang, they were
intercepted by Dong Zhuo, who then proceeded to the capital with his royal
charges. He went about solidifying his position, with many former soldiers
of the He brothers joining his army. Worried about an army that was stationed
east of the capital, Dong got its commander's subordinate, Lü Bu, to murder
his superior and bring the force over to Dong's side. Dong now had a
preponderance of military power in the capital region. He forced Empress
Dowager He to depose the ruler and replaced him with Liu Xie (Emperor
Xian), who was just a boy. Dong also killed the empress dowager and the
former emperor (HHs, 69.2249-2253, 72.2322-2324, 74A.2374, 56.1830,
9.367, 369; Ch'ü, Han Social Structure, 499-502, 505-506; Sgz, 1.5, 6.172,
6.174, 21.600; de Crespigny, To Establish Peace, 1:1-25; Leban, "Ts'ao Ts'ao
and the Rise of Wei," 130-131, 135-137, 140-141, 142-147, 152).

Some idea of Dong Zhuo's brutality can be had through the following
account of events after he made Liu Xie emperor:

Zhuo was transferred to be chancellor of state and appointed marquis
of Mei. Unannounced by the herald, he would enter the hall in sword
and shoes. His mother was also appointed lady of Chiyang [OMITTED]
and provided with a prefect of the household and assistant of the
household.

Having happened upon tremendous chaos in the imperial house
when he came leading his crack troops, Zhuo was able arbitrarily
to set aside one ruler and establish another and to seize the weapons
of the arsenal and the treasures of state. His might shook the world.

By nature Zhuo was ruthless and inhuman, so he menaced the
masses with severe punishments. He was sure to take retribution over
the smallest grievance, and people could not save themselves. He once
sent an army to Yangcheng [OMITTED]. It was just at the time of the secondmonth
sacrifice to the God of Earth, and the people were all at the
altar. The soldiers all went forth and cut the men's heads off, yoked
up their carts and oxen, and loaded up the women and property. They
tied the heads they had cut off to the shafts and axles of the carts
and returned to Luoyang in a continuous line, saying they had
attacked bandits and made a big haul, and shouting "Long life!" They
entered the Kaiyang Gate [OMITTED] and burned the heads. They gave
the women to the armored soldiers as slaves and concubines. They
even raped the palace women and princesses. Such were his cruelty
and treachery.

(Sgz, 6.174)

As soon as Dong began his coup, Yuan Shao quit the capital. Cao Cao
slipped out about the same time and headed east, where he raised an army.
Both men participated in an abortive anti-Dong alliance (HHs, 74A.2374; Sgz,
1.5-6; Leban, "Ts'ao Ts'ao and the Rise of Wei," 146-149, 151-152). On
9 April 190, because of the threat posed by the opposition forces—and over
the protests of the court—Dong sent Emperor Xian to Chang'an [OMITTED], forcing
the population of Luoyang to move, too (HHs, 9.369, 62A.2327; Sgz, 1.7).
Luoyang was at the time one of the greatest and most populous cities in the
world. The suffering caused by Dong's decision and the violence with which
he put it into effect can only be imagined, but there are moving descriptions


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of the pain and destruction he inflicted. He razed Luoyang and pillaged its
environs, even ordering Lü Bu to loot imperial tombs and other mausolea
(HHs, 9.370, 72.2327; Sgz, 1.7; Zztj, 59.1897; Bielenstein, "Lo-yang in Later
Han Times," 89-90; de Crespigny, To Establish Peace, 1:42-43; Leban, "Ts'ao
Ts'ao and the Rise of Wei," 155-156). On 22 May 192, Dong Zhuo was
assassinated in Chang'an by his adopted son and confederate Lü Bu as part
of a plot organized by Wang Yun [OMITTED] (HHs, 72.2331-2332; Sgz, 6.179;
Leban, "Ts'ao Ts'ao and the Rise of Wei," 186). The literature of the Jian'an
Period often refers to the hardships and destruction that attended the end of
the Han. Two of Cao Cao's most famous poems, "Xie lu xing" [OMITTED] [Dew
on the Shallot] and "Hao li xing" [OMITTED] [Wormwood Village], deal with the
fall of the Han and the failure of the alliance against Dong Zhuo.

[11]

Yuan Shu, Yuan Shao's half brother, had been involved in the slaughter of the
eunuchs (HHs, 8.358, 69.2252). He emerged as one of eight powerful satraps
of the 190s and even tried, to no avail, to establish his own dynasty in 197
(Mansvelt Beck, "The Fall of Han," 342, 349, 351). He is mentioned several
times in Fascicle 50 on the empresses and consorts of Wu below.

[12]

On he ku [OMITTED], translated here as "what misery," see Sgz jiaogu, 39.

[13]

Empress Bian herself gave birth to four sons: Cao Pi, Cao Zhang [OMITTED] (d. 223),
Cao Zhi, and Cao Xiong [OMITTED], who died young. These brothers eventually
had at least twenty-one half brothers (Sgz, 20.579). The eldest brother, Cao
Ang [OMITTED], referred to below by his appellative Zixiu [OMITTED], was the son of
Lady Liu [OMITTED] (see also Sgz, 1.14). He was killed in battle in 197, at which time
he must have been at least twenty. Thus he would have been born no later
than 178. Cao Pi, born in 187, was the next eldest, followed by Cao Zhang,
whose birthdate is not known. Cao Zhi may have been the next son born,
but this is not an absolute certainty, for Cao Ang's younger brother Cao Shuo
[OMITTED], who seems to have died in his teens, conceivably was older (Xu, "Cao
Zhi wei Cao Cao diji erzi," 36-38). See also Appendix I, Table 9.

[14]

Cao Pi was named Cao Cao's heir in the winter of Jian'an 22 (A.D. 217; see
Sgz, 1.49, 19.557). He was general of the gentlemen-of-the-household for all
purposes (wuguan zhonglang jiang [OMITTED]) at the time. Zhang yu [OMITTED],
here translated as "chief attendants," was the name of a Han office, but it
is not entirely clear that it was a formal term (Sgz cidian, 230). Drawing on
Wei Hong's [OMITTED] (fl. A.D. 25-57) Han jiu yi [OMITTED] [Old Han Ceremonies],
Ru Chun notes that "a female chief attendant (nü zhang yu [OMITTED]) was
comparable to a [male] palace attendant" (Hs, 63.2744).

[15]

Qi commandery was in modern Shandong. There seems to be a mistake in
the date given here, for there was no yisi day in that month. Imataka, Inami,
and Kominami, Sangoku shi, 1:149, also question this date. Note that Leban,
"Ts'ao Ts'ao and the Rise of Wei," 57, reads second month for twelfth month
and thus gives the Western equivalent 4 April 160. Yanxi 3 ran from 27
December 159 to 13 January 161.

[16]

Empress Bian's father is referred to by his later title here.

[17]

This quotation from the Wei History also appears in the commentary to Shi
shuo xin yu.
See Xu, Shishuo xinyu jiao jian, 19.364-365; Mather, Shih-shuo
Hsin-yü,
342. In the Shi shuo xin yu version, the diviner is called Wang Yue
[OMITTED].

[18]

In 196, following the advice of Xun Yu [OMITTED] (163-212), Cao Cao took
Emperor Xian under his protection and installed him at Xu [OMITTED] (or Xucheng),


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Page 196
also called Xuchang [OMITTED], which was located in the vicinity of modern
Xuchang in He'nan.

[19]

Cao Cao died early in Jian'an 25 (on 15 March 220) in Luoyang. Cao Pi
succeeded him as chancellor and king of Wei and, later, on 10 or 11 December
220, became emperor of the new Wei dynasty (Zhang, San Cao nianpu, 168,
177; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:10, 38-39; Leban,
"Managing Heaven's Mandate," 322, 325).

[20]

See note 58 below.

[21]

Zhou Xuan was noted for his skill at dream interpretation. The story related
here by Pei Songzhi is found in Zhou's biography in Sgz, 29.810-811. It has
been translated as follows:

The emperor also asked, "I dreamed that I was rubbing away at the
design on a coin, trying to make it disappear. But the design only
became brighter. What does this mean?"

Xuan was distraught, and he hesitated to answer. The emperor
pressed him with the question again, and Xuan said, "This derives
from a problem in Your Majesty's own household. Although you are
wishing for something, the imperial mother does not concur. This is
the reason the pattern only brightens, although you would like to rub
it away."

At that time, it was true that the emperor wanted to inflict a
punishment on his younger brother Cao Zhi, and he was pressuring
his mother to permit it. But the imperial mother was willing only
to reduce Cao Zhi in rank.

(DeWoskin, Doctors, Diviners, and
Magicians of Ancient China,
139)
[22]

It is unclear what offense is referred to here and difficult to reconcile Empress
Bian's response with the very different one to an event recorded in Cao Zhi's
biography: "In the year Huangchu 2 [221/222], Regent-Receptionist (jianguo
yezhe
[OMITTED]) Guan Jun [OMITTED], catering to the emperor's wishes,
memorialized that "While drunk, Cao Zhi was disrespectful and coerced and
intimidated Your envoy." All the officials concerned wanted the emperor to
punish this offense, but because of the empress dowager he only demoted Cao
Zhi to marquis of An district (Anxiang hou [OMITTED])" (Sgz, 19.561). The most
detailed investigation of Cao's demotion to marquis of An district is found in
Xu, "Cao Zhi shengping ba kao," 204-212. Xu pulls the fragmentary evidence
together into a convincing sequence of events. See also Zhang, San Cao nianpu,
189-190.

[23]

For another translation of this Wei History entry, see Fang, The Chronicle of
the Three Kingdoms,
1:106, 124-126.

[24]

Chen Qun's biography is in Sgz, 22.633-638. He was an important official,
first under Liu Bei, then under Cao Cao and Cao Pi. He is often credited with
establishing the nine-rank system of official recruitment in 220, but is perhaps
better characterized as the person who formalized its use in the government
(Holzman, "Les neuf catégories," 393; Ch'en, "A Confucian Magnate's Idea
of Political Violence," 79; Fairbank, "King and Province in the Western Chin,"
10). For another translation of Chen Qun's memorial and the emperor's
response, see Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:11-12, 41.

[25]

As Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:41, points out, there is a
pertinent passage in the Record of Rites. In Legge's translation it says, "Hence
while the wife had (herself) no rank, she was held to be of the rank of her
husband, and she took her seat according to the position belonging to him"
(Legge, LîKî, 1:441; Lj, 26.19b).

[26]

The term "imperial secretariat" is a reference to the masters of writing (shang
shu
). Well before the Wei, the notion that a person who had no rank during
his or her lifetime should not receive a posthumous name was no longer strictly
observed. See Ch'ü, Han Social Structure, 78. Although Cao Pi accepted—and
even praised—Chen Qun's argument, ultimately Cao Rui conferred titles on
Empress Bian's parents, and her grandparents as well.

[27]

On Empress Bian's family, see Appendix I, Table 3.

[28]

Note that Sgz, 3.97 gives the precise date of death as 9 July 230 rather than
the May/June date given here.

[29]

This sentence is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:328. Gao Tumulus lay west of Ye; that is, to the west of modern Linzhang
[OMITTED], Hebei. To judge from two surviving orders he composed, Cao Cao seems
to have personally chosen this site, which was visible from the famous Bronze
Bird Terrace (Tong que tai [OMITTED]), for his tomb. He said he wished to have
a thrifty burial there (see Cao Cao ji, 3.51, 57-58; Anhui Boxian, Cao Cao
ji yi zhu,
176-177, 187-188). As early as 205, Cao Cao prohibited lavish
burials (Sgz, 1.27). On lavish versus thrifty burial and the numerous calls for
the latter near the close of the Han, see Poo, "Ideas Concerning Death and
Burial in Pre-Han and Han China."

[30]

Qian Daxin says that a du xiang was a district near the capital and that a
du xiang hou, or the marquis of such a district, ranked above a regular xiang
hou,
or district marquis (Sgz jijie, 5.7a).

[31]

Duke of Gaogui District was a title held by Cao Mao, a nephew of Emperor
Ming. In Jingchu [OMITTED] 3(239), Emperor Ming died and was succeeded by his
adopted son Cao Fang, a seven- or eight-year-old. Cao Fang's regents were
Cao Shuang and Sima Yi [OMITTED] (179-251). A decade later, Sima Yi launched
a coup, and the Sima family took control of the Wei dynasty. After Sima Yi's
death, his eldest son Sima Shi [OMITTED], also known as King Jing of the Sima
family (Sima Jing wang [OMITTED]), became the de facto ruler of Wei. In 254,
he and his younger brother Sima Zhao, also known as King Wen [OMITTED], removed
Cao Fang as emperor and replaced him with Cao Mao, who was then fourteen
years old. In 260, Cao Mao attempted to do away with Sima Zhao but was
himself killed. He was replaced by Cao Huang [OMITTED], whose name was changed
to Cao Huan because rulers' personal names were taboo, and Huang was
thought difficult to avoid (Sgz, 4.147; see Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
2:354). Cao Huan was a grandson of Cao Cao and son of Cao
Yu [OMITTED] (King Yu of Yan [OMITTED]). Known to history as Emperor Yuan [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] (r. 260-265), or the Young Emperor (Shaodi [OMITTED]), he was just a teenager
at the time (Sgz, 4.117-147; Zhang, San Cao nianpu, 233; Fu, Zhongguo tong
shi,
1:252-254). It is because Cao Mao did serve as emperor, even though he
is not so referred to here, that Bian Long's daughter is called empress.

[32]

King of Chenliu refers to Cao Huan, who is also referred to as Duke of
Changdao District (Changdao xianggong [OMITTED]). After a five-year stint
as emperor, he abdicated in 266 to Sima Yan (r. 266-290), the first ruler of
the Jin dynasty. Cao Huan's biography is in Sgz, 4.147-154.

[33]

This paragraph is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
2:429-430.

[34]

Bielenstein notes that "majors might command entire regiments in exceptional
cases" (Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times, 120). That seems to be
what is meant here.

[35]

Wuqiu Shouwang (ca. 156-110 B.C.) is sometimes referred to as Yuqiu
Shouwang [OMITTED], as in Xiao Tong's [OMITTED] (501-531) "Wen xuan xu" [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] [Preface to Selections of Refined Literature]. During the reign of the Han
Emperor Wu, a bronze tripod cauldron (ding [OMITTED]) was unearthed. All the other
officials saw this object as a numinous Zhou relic, but Wuqiu dissented. When
the emperor asked why, he said it was a gift from Heaven in approbation of
the Han. Emperor Wu was greatly pleased (Hs, 64A.2798). Hs, 30.1747 credits
Wuqiu with fifteen fu, or rhapsodies, all of which are lost (Knechtges, Wen
xuan,
1:95n).

During the reign of the Han Emperor Xuan [OMITTED] (r. 74-49 B.C.), Wang Xiang
[OMITTED], who was inspector of Yi province [OMITTED] (in the region of modern
Sichuan), had Wang Bao [OMITTED] (d. ca. 61 B.C.) compose a eulogy on the virtue
of the Han, which He Wu and others learned to sing. Wang, He, and others
were rewarded by Emperor Xuan (Hs, 86.3481).

[36]

The "external difficulties" would have been Wu and Shu. The emperor seems
to have been more interested in the ladies of the palace, as indicated near the
end of Chapter 4 above.

[37]

Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:70-71, makes much of some
confusion about the date of birth of Cao Rui (Emperor Ming). However, it
seems likely that he was born later than Fang allows, probably sometime in
206. See Zhang, San Cao nianpu, 94.

Wuji, in the Han kingdom of Zhongshan, was in the vicinity of the modern
county by the same name in Hebei. Zhen Han was the son-in-law of Minister
over the Masses (situ [OMITTED]) Kong Guang [OMITTED], a supporter of Wang Mang.
Both Zhen and Kong played a role in Wang's consolidation of his power, and
Zhen became a member of his circle of advisers and one of his most important
officials. See Dubs, The History of the Former Han Dynasty, 3:137-138, 140,
142-145, 167, 181, 200, 225, 234, 236-237, 263, 319.

[38]

This places Empress Zhen's family in the level just below the highest officials
in the bureaucracy. See Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times, 4-5;
Hucker, A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China, 16.

[39]

Shangcai, in the Han commandery of Ru'nan [OMITTED], was located near modern
Shangcai in He'nan. Liu Jun's [OMITTED] (462-521) commentary to A New Account
of Tales of the World
quotes the Wei Epitome, which calls her father Zhen
Hui [OMITTED] (Xu, Shishuo xinyu jiao jian, 35.489; Mather, Shih-shuo Hsin-yü,
484). However, the sentence in which Zhen Yi's name is given as Zhen Hui
is missing from the Wei Epitome as that text has been preserved in Pei's
commentary. According to Lu Bi, the Wei Epitome text has probably been
garbled in the commentary to Shi shuo xin yu (Sgz jijie, 5.11a).

[40]

This is apparently a reference to the disintegration of the Han in the 190s and
the concomitant rise of various military leaders, rebels, and powerful regional
administrators. See Mansvelt Beck, "The Fall of Han," 349.

[41]

This is a proverb found in Zuo zhuan, Huan 10.

[42]

Changshan was a Han commandery with its seat located in modern Yuanshi


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[OMITTED] country, Hebei. Its name was changed from Hengshan [OMITTED] to avoid the
personal name of Emperor Wen of Han, Liu Heng [OMITTED].

[43]

Quliang was a Han prefecture in the area of modern Yongnian [OMITTED], Hebei.

[44]

On hao mu [OMITTED] ("keening and wailing"), see Sgz jiaogu, 40.

[45]

See Chapter 3, note 89.

[46]

You province was to the northeast, in the region of modern northern Hebei
and Liaoning.

[47]

Cf. Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:68. Ye was the seat of Ji
province and was the base of power of Yuan Shao and his son Yuan Shang
[OMITTED] (d.207). Cao Cao captured the city in 204. It was located in Hebei in
the vicinity of modern Yezhen [OMITTED] and Santai cun [OMITTED], in the southwest
of Linzhang county.

[48]

See note 19 above for the date Cao Pi became emperor. This actually marked
the beginning of the Huangchu reign period, but the name was applied
retroactively to the whole calendar year.

[49]

These two sentences are also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
1:40. Duke of Shanyang is the title that was bestowed on Emperor
Xian, the last Han emperor, after he abdicated. The abdication took place on
either 19 or 25 November 220 (Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:10, 36-37; Leban, "Managing Heaven's Mandate," 324-325). The new title
was given on 13 December 220 (Sgz, 2.76; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
1:10, 39).

[50]

Honorable Lady Li was the mother of Cao Pi's son Cao Xie [OMITTED], the
Lamented King of Zan [OMITTED], who died at a relatively young age (Sgz,
20.590).

[51]

Empress Zhen's suicide was ordered on 6 August 221 (Fang, The Chronicle
of the Three Kingdoms,
1:48, 71).

[52]

See Chapter 5, note 83.

[53]

Cf. Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:69; Mather, Shih-shuo Hsin-yü,
484.

[54]

Cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 1:69-70; Mather, Shih-shuo
Hsin-yü,
484-485.

[55]

Rear palace (hou gong [OMITTED]) is a commonly used term that refers to the section
of a palace complex where the consorts dwell.

[56]

Guanzhong (Within the Passes) is the name that was commonly applied to
the area of modern Shaanxi. The campaign mentioned here brought virtually
all of the area under Cao Cao's control (see Sgz, 1.34-36). Both Cao Zhi and
Cao Pi refer to it in rhapsodies. The preface to Cao Zhi's "Li si fu" [OMITTED]
[Rhapsody on Thoughts of Parting] says, "In the sixteenth year of Jian'an, a
great force went west to quell Ma Chao [OMITTED] [176-222]. The heir apparent
stayed behind in the capital while I went along." Cao Pi's preface to his "Gan
li fu" [OMITTED] [Rhapsody on Being Moved by Parting] likewise notes, "In the
sixteenth year of Jian'an, the emperor went on a military expedition west. I
stayed behind in charge. My elderly mother and all my younger brothers went
along" (Zhao, Cao Zhi ji jiao zhu, 1.40; Wei Wendi ji, 1.2b). See also Cutter,
"On Reading Cao Zhi's `Three Good Men,' " 8. Mengjin (Meng Ford) was
south of modern Meng county, He'nan.

[57]

This was an expedition against Sun Quan. See Sgz, 1.49.

[58]

Palace of Prolonged Autumn (Changqiu gong [OMITTED]) refers to the empress
(Sgz jijie, 5.12b; HHs, 10A.409, commentary). The usage is like that of referring
to Empress Dowager Bian as Palace of Eternal Longevity. Prolonged Autumn
was the title of an official responsible for matters pertaining to the empresses
during the Former Han (Hs, 19A.734). The Palace of Prolonged Autumn was
established during the Later Han and was occupied by the empress (DHhy,
38.405). There are at least two explanations of the name. One holds that
autumn was adopted because it refers to the season when everything begins
to ripen (HHs, 10A.409, commentary). Another says that autumn was used
because an empress is yin (as opposed to yang), and autumn is when yin begins
to wax (Wei Zhao, Bian Shi ming [OMITTED] [Debating Explaining Names], cited
in Sghy, 9.163). See also Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times, 69.

[59]

The term Six Palaces (liu gong [OMITTED]) generally refers to the quarters of the
empress and lesser consorts within the imperial palace. The Rites of Zhou says,
"[The administrator of the interior (nei zai [OMITTED])] teaches the rites of yin to
the Six Palaces." The commentary explains:

Zheng Sinong [OMITTED] [Zheng Zhong [OMITTED], d. 83] says, "The rites
of yin are the rites of the women. Six Palaces: five in the rear, one
in front. . . . " [Zheng] Xuan says, " `Six Palaces' refers to the queen.
The wives refer to the boudoir as `palace.' `Palace' is a euphemism
for the queen. Just as the king puts up six palaces and occupies a
primary boudoir, there are also a primary boudoir and five pleasure
boudoirs. The instructor dares not rebuke her, so he refers to her as
`Six Palaces.' This is similar to the-current way of referring to the
emperor as `Central Palace.' "

(Zlzy, 13.12a; cf. Biot, Le Tcheou-li,
1:142 n.3)
[60]

The Spring and Autumn Annals, one of the canonical texts of Confucianism,
is said to be by Confucius himself. It is an extremely terse chronicle, but due
to the importance that Confucius and others placed on it, it has traditionally
been held to be made up of carefully nuanced judgments on events of the time.
More recently, however, the existence of such praise and blame messages in
the text has been called into question. See Durrant, "Ching," 313. We follow
Wu Jinhua [OMITTED] in considering the negative bu [OMITTED] in this sentence to be
an interpolation and have omitted it (Sgz jiaogu, 41).

[61]

The term translated here as "Wei historians" could be taken as Wei History,
as in Miao, San guo zhi daodu, 22. In any case, it means the Wei shu or those
who wrote it.

[62]

See also Sgz, 13.412; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:234; Ss,
16.444. Wang Lang was an important official and scholar who was close to
Cao Pi. He was the recipient of a famous letter from Cao Pi in which Cao
subordinates literature to "establishing virtue and making a name" as a means
to immortal fame. See Holzman, "Literary Criticism in China in the Early Third
Century A.D.," 121-122; Cutter, "The Incident at the Gate," 249; and Cutter,
"To the Manner Born?"

To be commissioned with a verge (shi chi jie [OMITTED]) conferred great prestige
on the recipient and granted him extraordinary powers over government
agencies. See Hucker, A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China, no.
5223. A Great Sacrifice (tailao [OMITTED]) involved sacrificing an ox, a goat, and


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a pig. Great Sacrifices were offered on only the most important occasions, for
example, as offerings to the altars, to Soil and Millet, who were the protective
deities of the empire. The precise date of Empress Zhen's canonization is in
doubt. See Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:203, 215.

[63]

For another translation of Empress Zhen's biography through the preceding
sentence, see Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:68-69. See also
Sgz, 3.92; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:223, 234. Weichang
prefecture in Zhongshan commandery was in the vicinity of modern Wuji
county in Hebei.

[64]

A Han cun [OMITTED] (inch) was about 2.3 cm. Three States period cun were a bit
longer—about 2.4 cm. For convenient tables of Han weights and measures,
see Nienhauser, The Grand Scribe's Records, 1:xxxi-xxxiv, and Twitchett and
Loewe, The Cambridge History of China, 1:xxxviii. For more detailed
information, see Qiu, Zhongguo lidai duliangheng kao, 12-69. See especially
pp. 68-69 on the Three States period.

[65]

The reburial of Empress Zhen took place on 17 February 231 (Sgz, 3.97; Fang,
The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:320, 333).

[66]

Dongxiang probably refers to one of the prefectures of Pei. It was located in
the northeastern part of modern Anhui province. Anxi prefecture was in the
vicinity of modern Ding [OMITTED] county, Hebei.

[67]

The memorial is also mentioned in Ss, 16.444.

[68]

This is an allusion to the "Ganying" [OMITTED] [Sympathetic Responses] section
of the Xiao jing [OMITTED] [Classic of Filial Piety]. See Xiao jing zhu shu, 8.1a.

[69]

The first two groups of poems in the "Airs of the States" section of the Classic
of Poetry
are "Zhou nan" [OMITTED] and "Shao nan" [OMITTED], referred to collectively
as the "Er nan" [OMITTED] [Two Nan]. The "Two Nan," as shown by the "Minor
Preface" to the Classic of Poetry, have traditionally and allegorically been read
as depictions of the virtues of rulers' consorts and other women. See Legge,
The Chinese Classics, 4:36-41, and the discussion in Chapter 3 above.

[70]

It is unclear whether shi fa [OMITTED] here refers to an actual work. Su Xun's work
of the same title contains virtually the same explanation of zhao, citing the
Eastern Han scholar Liu Xi (Sf, 1.7b). See also Wang, Shi fa yanjiu, 367-368.

[71]

Lord Millet was a legendary ancestor of the Zhou ruling house, and Jiang Yuan
was his mother (see also Chapter 2, note 4 above). She was the wife of Di
Ku, said to be a great-grandson of the Yellow Emperor, and she became
pregnant by treading on the footprint of a giant. See Sj, 4.111-112; Chavannes,
Mémoires historiques, 1:209-210; and Nienhauser, The Grand Scribe's
Records,
1:55.

[72]

These are the same terms used by the Hallowed Documents in describing Yao.
Cf. the opening of "Yao dian" [OMITTED] [Canons of Yao] of the Hallowed
Documents.
See Legge, The Chinese Classics, 3:15.

[73]

This memorial also appears, with some textual differences, in Ss, 16.444.

[74]

The "Wang zhi" [OMITTED] [Ruler's Institutions] section of the Record of Rites says
that the emperor has seven miao [OMITTED] (temples) for seven generations of ancestors
(Lj, 12.13b). See also Zhongguo wenhuashi gongju shu, 222, and the
subcommentary in Zlzy, 42.19b.

[75]

Gaoxin shi is another name for Di Ku (see note 71 above). Gaoxin is said
to have been a toponym, perhaps the name of his benefice. Di Ku divined that
his four sons would become rulers. The four sons were: Di Zhi, who succeeded


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him as ruler; Tao Tang shi [OMITTED], i.e., the legendary sage-ruler Yao; Qi [OMITTED],
reputed ancestor of the ruling house of the Yin [OMITTED], or Shang, dynasty; and
Hou Ji. See Sj, 1.13-14, 45, 3.91, 4.111; Chavannes, Mémoires historiques,
1:39-42, 93-94, 173-174, 209-210; Nienhauser, The Grand Scribe's Records,
1:5-6, 17, 41, 55. See also Yuan, Zhongguo shenhua chuanshuo cidian, 295296.

[76]

See Zlzy, 42.19b. Yize [OMITTED] and zhonglü (called by its name xiaolu [OMITTED] in
the Rites of Zhou) are two of the notes of the classical Chinese scale of twelve
notes (Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, 4.1:165-176; Zhongguo
wenhuashi gongju shu,
175-176). The grand huo [OMITTED] was music from the time
of the Shang founder Tang. See Zlzy, 42.8a. The ancestral mother is Jiang Yuan
(see note 71 above).

[77]

Karlgren, The Book of Odes, 263. See Mao shi 245.

[78]

Karlgren, The Book of Odes, 259-261. See Mao shi 300.

[79]

Youyu shi [OMITTED] is the legendary sage-ruler Shun. The main point here is
that, like Cao Pi, Shun became emperor through the abdication of his
predecessor. On other references to this similarity, see Leban, "Managing
Heaven's Mandate," 330, 333-334.

[80]

This refers to the three generations of the Wei: Cao Cao, Cao Pi, and Cao
Rui.

[81]

This is an allusion to the poem "Weiyang" [North of the Wei] in the Classic
of Poetry
(Mao shi 134). The traditional interpretation says it is about Duke
Kang of Qin's [OMITTED] longing for his mother. See Legge, The Chinese Classics,
4:58, 203.

[82]

This section on the death of Cao Shu and the subsequent designation of Guo
De as her posthumous offspring is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of
the Three Kingdoms,
1:388. See also Sgz, 22.636, 25.707; Fang, The Chronicle
of the Three Kingdoms,
1:373-374, 388-390.

[83]

Pingyuan is the name of a commandery that had its seat in the modern county
by the same name in northwest Shandong.

[84]

This sentence is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:665. King of Qi here refers to Cao Fang. She became empress on 29 May
243, while Cao Fang was still titular emperor (Sgz, 4.120; Fang, The Chronicle
of the Three Kingdoms,
1:655, 665).

[85]

Yang Fu has a biography in Sgz, 25.700-708. See also Zhuo, San guo renwu
lun xu ji,
77-80. Zhuo deems him one of the few people to offer honest
criticisms to Emperor Wen.

[86]

Mao shi 191. The translation is from Legge, The Chinese Classics, 4:309. This
poem is traditionally read as a criticism of the reign of King You of Zhou and
of his minister Yin [OMITTED], who did not take steps to improve the situation. See
Legge, The Chinese Classics, 4:67. On King You, see Chapter 2 above.

[87]

The author of Encomia on the Dukes of Jin is Fu Chang [OMITTED]. See Zhao,
Nianer shi zhaji, 6.106.

[88]

General-in-chief who supports the state was an honorific designation used but
occasionally (Hong, San guo zhiguan biao 57).

[89]

The office of general-in-chief of the subduing army originated under Emperor
Wen (Lü, Zhongguo lidai guanzhi da cidian, 848; Rogers, The Chronicle of
Fu Chien,
215n).

[90]

The reign title was retroactively changed from Xianxi to Taishi in the twelfth
month of the year (January/February 266). See also note 32 above.

[91]

Shizu [OMITTED] (Succedent Progenitor) refers to Sima Yan, the first emperor of the
Jin dynasty.

[92]

You, King of Qi, was noted for his virtue. At the advice of ministers who
disliked You, Emperor Wu ordered him to leave the capital and proceed to
his fief. As it says here, this was protested by Zhen De, Wang Ji, and others
(Zztj, 81.2581-2582). Yuan Bo [OMITTED] misconstrues these two sentences, taking
them to mean Sima Yan (the Succedent Progenitor) was pleased by Zhen De's
actions (Cao, Baihua San guo zhi, 1:206). But, as Hu Sanxing [OMITTED] (1230-1287)
points out, Zhen's new offices involved a shift out of the inner court,
with its proximity to the throne, to the outer court, or general bureaucracy
(Zztj, 81.2582). See also Js, 42.1205.

[93]

In 188, a special defense force of eight units was organized, partly to protect
the capital and the emperor and partly to offset the power of General-in-Chief
He Jin. The force was led by the eight commandants of the West Garden
(Xiyuan ba xiaowei [OMITTED]; see Hucker, A Dictionary of Official Titles
in Imperial China,
nos. 2285, 4368, 6568; Leban, "Ts'ao Ts'ao and the Rise
of Wei," 124-127; Mansvelt Beck, "The Fall of Han," 326). When first
organized, its head was the eunuch Jian Shi [OMITTED], who was in command of
the Upper Army (Shang jun [OMITTED]). The other seven commandants included
Yuan Shao, who commanded the Middle Army (Zhong jun [OMITTED]), and Cao
Cao, commandant of the Control Army (Dian jun xiaowei [OMITTED]; see
HHs, 8.356 n, 69.2247, 74A.2374; Sgz, 1.5; Leban, "Ts'ao Ts'ao and the Rise
of Wei," 126; Ch'ü, Han Social Structure, 495-496.)

[94]

This sentence refers to two of the kings involved in the turbulent events of
290-306, especially that segment known to history as the Ba wang zhi luan
[OMITTED] (Eight Kings Insurrection; 300-306). Brief accounts of this period
appear, for instance, in Zhao, Nianer shi zhaji, 8.125-126, and Fu, Zhongguo
tong shi,
1:260-264. Much more thorough is Fairbank, "Kingdom and
Province in the Western Chin." The following summary is based on these
sources.

Kings were very powerful in early Jin times, in contrast to the case under
the Wei. Not long after Emperor Wu (Sima Yan) took the throne in 266, he
made twenty-seven male relatives kings, some of them with very large incomes
and considerable military power. At first these kings resided in the capital. In
277, they were sent to their benefices. Some were placed in charge of the
military affairs of the provinces (zhou [OMITTED]) into which Jin territory was divided.
That same year, Emperor Wu further reduced the military apparatus of the
provinces and commanderies. This resulted in virtually all military power
residing in the kingdoms.

In 290, Emperor Wu died, and the heir apparent Sima Zhong, known to
history as Emperor Hui, ascended the throne at nine years of age. During
Emperor Hui's reign, the empire suffered from factionalism at court, incursions
by non-Chinese peoples in the North and West, armed struggle among
members of the imperial family, as well as famine and local rebellion.

In the 290s, Sima Zhong's consort Empress Jia and her faction held sway
at court. The heir apparent was Sima Yu [OMITTED], who was not her own son.
In 297, when Sima Yu was twenty, the empress and her adherents hatched
a plot to get rid of him and the threat he posed to their hold on power. The


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heir was deposed and his mother executed. Sima Lun (Lun, King of Zhao),
mentioned here in the Encomia on the Dukes of Jin, then tricked the empress
into having Sima Yu murdered. By charging her with this crime, he was able
to remove her and take control of the whole central government. Sima Lun
had been assisted in his machinations by a number of people, including Sima
Jiong [OMITTED] (Jiong, King of Qi; d. 303).

Sima Lun and his senior advisor Sun Xiu [OMITTED] were not popular among
the Jin elite, and their program of increasing Sima Lun's authority led to the
Eight Kings Insurrection. An initial attempt to overthrow Sima Lun was made
by Sima Yun [OMITTED] in September of the year 300 and failed, at the cost of
many lives. Early in 301, Sima Lun forced the abdication of Emperor Hui,
assumed the throne himself, and changed the reign title to Jianshi [OMITTED]. Sima
Jiong and others then rose up and defeated and killed Sima Lun and his
supporters. Although Sima Jiong then became the dominant figure in Jin
government, it was not long before he drew the criticism of other kings. He
was overthrown and killed in 303.

[95]

Guangzong prefecture in Anping commandery was east of modern Wei [OMITTED]
county, Hebei.

[96]

Tongdi was a prefecture with its seat south of that of modern Qin [OMITTED] county,
Shanxi.

[97]

Eastern Palace (Dong gong [OMITTED]) is the term for the residence of an heir
apparent.

[98]

Leizu [OMITTED], the daughter of Xiling shi [OMITTED], is said to have been the
principal wife of the Yellow Emperor, as well as the first sericulturalist. See
Yuan, Zhongguo shenhua chuanshuo cidian, 423-424. Gui is another name
for the legendary sage-ruler Shun, whose wives Ehuang [OMITTED] and Nüying [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] were the daughters of Shun's benefactor Yao. Sj, 6.248 says of the First
Emperor of Qin: "Traveling in a southwesterly direction be crossed over the
R[iver] Huai and came at length to Hengshan. At Nanjun [[OMITTED]] he took
boat and was sailing down the river to the Xiangshan shrine when a great
wind arose and nearly prevented his getting to land. The emperor inquired
of his wise men who Xiangjun was. They replied, `According to our
information, Xiangjun are the daughters of Yao and the wives of Shun who
are buried in this place' " (Hawkes, "The Quest of the Goddess," 56). See also
Karlgren, "Legends and Cults in Ancient China," 296; O'Hara, The Position
of Woman in Early China,
13-17.

[99]

Jie was the last ruler of the Xia dynasty, banished by the Shang founder Cheng
Tang [OMITTED] to Nanchao (modern Chao [OMITTED] county, Anhui). Moxi, Jie's consort,
is mentioned in a variety of books and is traditionally treated as a beautiful
but utterly depraved woman who contributed to the downfall of the dynasty.
See Gy, 7.255; Legge, The Chinese Classics, 3:177; Sj, 2.88-89, 19.1967; Yuan,
Zhongguo shenhua chuanshuo cidian, 259.

[100]

On Daji, see Chapter 3, "Texts Devoted to Women" above.

[101]

Yi jing, Hexagram 37, "Tuan zhuan." Cf. Wilhelm, I Ching, 570. This is a
part of the same passage that Chen Shou used to open this juan.

[102]

Cf. Zuo zhuan, Ai 24.

[103]

Mengzi, 6B.7.

[104]

This is an allusion to Zuo zhuan, Zhao 18. For another translation of Empress
Guo's biography through the following sentence, see Fang, The Chronicle of


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the Three Kingdoms, 1:106-107, 125-126. She was made empress on 1
November 222 (Sgz, 2.80; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:106,
126).

[105]

References are to Yao's daughters, Ehuang and Nüying, who married the lowly
Shun, and Tai Jiang [OMITTED] and Tai Ren [OMITTED], grandmother and mother of King
Wen of Zhou.

[106]

In the year A.D. 77, then Empress Dowager Ma issued a long edict in which
she decried, and claimed to eschew, an unduly extravagant way of life. The
statement was possibly part of a piece of special pleading in which she was
hoping to deflect criticism from herself and her family. She claimed that her
thrift was intended to set a good example and to bring moral pressure to bear
where it was most needed (Loewe, "The Conduct of Government and the Issues
at Stake [A.D. 57-167]," 295). See also Chapters 2 and 3 above.

[107]

On the pepper rooms (jiao fang [OMITTED]), where the empresses lived, see
Knechtges, Wen xuan, 1:122n.

[108]

The expedition in question was an abortive move against Wu and seems to
have begun in the seventh month (August of 224). See Zhang, San Cao nianpu,
205-206. The Terrace of Perpetual Beginning (Yongshi tai [OMITTED]) is
mentioned as a feature of Xuchang in He Yan's [OMITTED] (d. 249) "Jingfu dian
fu" [OMITTED] [Rhapsody on the Hall of Great Blessings], a work ordered by
Emperor Ming. See Wx, 11.31b; Knechtges, Wen xuan, 2:294 n, 295.

[109]

See O'Hara, The Position of Woman in Early China, 116-117.

[110]

Guangling commandery had its seat in the vicinity of modern Yangzhou [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]. Cao Pi set out from Xuchang in the third month (March/April 225) and
reached Qiao in the fifth month (June/July). He reached Guangling in the tenth
month (November/December), but cold weather forced him to withdraw. See
Sgz, 2.84-85; Zhang, San Cao nianpu, 209.

[111]

Probably this is a reference to the Guo River [OMITTED].

[112]

This sentence and the next one are also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of
the Three Kingdoms,
1:485. Empress Guo apparently died on 14 March 235.
See Sgz, 3.104; Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:465, 483, 484485.

[113]

This refers to Empress Zhen's having been buried hastily and without proper
ceremony. Neither was her body properly clothed and coffined for burial nor
was her hair appropriately coiffed. On burial preparations in general, see
volume 1 of de Groot, The Religious System of China. Da lian [OMITTED] refers
to the coffining of the deceased, including the final stage in the dressing of the
corpse (de Groot, The Religious System of China, 1:36, 331-342).

[114]

The passage is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:483-484. Emperor Ming was born in Jian'an 11 (206), so he would have
been about sixteen or seventeen by the time of Empress Zhen's death in
Huangchu 2 (221). As Lu Bi notes, it seems odd that he was so much in the
dark as to the circumstances of her death and burial, if these were, in fact,
as they are reported by Wei lüe (Sgz jijie, 5.21a).

[115]

See also Sgz, 3.91 (Wei lüe); Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:211-212.

[116]

The passage is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:483.

[117]

Some texts have the Wei shu say Qinglong 2, a mistake. See Sgz pangzheng,
7.6a; Sgz jijie, 5.21b.

[118]

The day renshen [OMITTED] was actually in the second month of Qinglong 3, making
the date 29 March 235 (Sgz pangzheng, 7.6a; Sgz jijie, 5.21b). The interment
of Empress Guo took place on 16 April.

[119]

The Three Luminaries (san guang [OMITTED]) are the sun, moon, and stars.

[120]

The Yellow Earth (huang lu [OMITTED]) is another name for the Yellow Springs
(huang quan [OMITTED]), that is, the subterranean abode of the dead. See, for
example, Loewe, Chinese Ideas of Life and Death, 34.

[121]

See notes 2 and 98 above.

[122]

The three mothers (san mu [OMITTED]) are the women referred to as Tai Jiang, Tai
Ren, and Tai Si; that is, the mothers of Hou Ji and kings Wen and Wu,
respectively.

[123]

The Purple Bourne (zi ji [OMITTED]) refers to imperial status.

[124]

Henei [OMITTED] was a Han commandery roughly encompassing the area along both
banks of the Yellow River within modern Henan. Dao [OMITTED] ("Mourned") was
a posthumous name given to royal personages who died young, but it could
also imply an inability to cultivate virtue. See Sf, 3b-4.4a; LXSf, B.6b-7a.

[125]

Empress Mao was made empress in the eleventh month (27 November/25
December 227; Sgz, 3.92).

[126]

Boping [OMITTED] was a prefecture northeast of modern Liaocheng [OMITTED] county,
Shandong.

[127]

We are not certain just what Mao Jia did. Dianyu [OMITTED] seems to be an
abbreviation for shuiheng dianyu [OMITTED], which in turn is equivalent to
shuiheng duwei [OMITTED] (Hucker, A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial
China,
nos. 5496, 5497; Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times, 82-83).
Among other responsibilities, this office oversaw the manufacture of various
items. Perhaps vehicles were among them.

[128]

A symposium, of course, was originally a drinking party, and that is the sense
of the word here. On the Han-Wei penchant for such activities and its effect
on literature, see, for example, Cutter, "Cao Zhi's Symposium Poems."

[129]

For another translation of Empress Mao's biography through the following
sentence, see Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:229, 240-241.
As Fang Beichen [OMITTED] notes, a noble of the time would not refer to himself
in such an overblown way. See Fang, San guo zhi zhu yi, 301 n. 8.

[130]

According to the traditional interpretation as represented by the "Minor
Preface," "Guan ju" (Mao shi 1, see Chapter 3 above, in the "Han
Philosophers" section) and "Lin zhi" [OMITTED] (Mao shi 11) are related. The topic
of the latter, said to be the ruler's good offspring and family, is seen as a natural
outcome of the topic of the former, said to be the acquisition of a virtuous
mate (or mates) and the moral transforming influence exerted on the world
thereby. See Legge, The Chinese Classics, 4:36-37, 38-39.

[131]

Illustrious Ancestor (Liezu [OMITTED]) refers to Emperor Ming.

[132]

The lines are from Mao shi 27, a poem traditionally interpreted as the
complaint of a neglected wife, a woman who has been replaced by a concubine
and herself demoted. See Legge, The Chinese Classics, 4:41 (prolegomena),
42.

[133]

The dates of Empress Mao's death and interment, 22 September and 25
October 237, are given in Sgz, 3.110. Fang notes that the word zu [OMITTED] ("died")
is used at Sgz 3.110 instead of the hong [OMITTED] one would normally expect for
one of her rank, and speculates that Chen Shou's intention may have been to
indicate "that she died under an infamous circumstance" (Fang, The Chronicle
of the Three Kingdoms,
1:549).

[134]

For another translation of the paragraph to this point, see Fang, The Chronicle
of the Three Kingdoms,
1:518-519, 549-550.

[135]

Zeng, must have been a diannong xiaowei [OMITTED], or colonel director of
agriculture, in charge of one of the agricultural garrisons established by the
government at the direction of Cao Cao. The agricultural garrison at Yuanwu
[OMITTED] prefecture was in the vicinity of modern Yuanyang [OMITTED], He'nan. The
rank of colonel director of agriculture was equivalent to a commandery
administrator. See Crowell, "Government Land Policies and Systems in Early
Imperial China," 158-162; Tan, Zhongguo lishi dituji, vol. 3, map 5-6.

[136]

Xiping was a commandery in the vicinity of modern Xining [OMITTED] county,
Gansu.

[137]

Heyou refers to the region to the "right" (west) of the Yellow River, as the
name implies. It roughly corresponds to modern Gansu and the Ningxia Hui
Autonomous Region.

[138]

Empress Guo was made empress on 16 January 239 (Sgz, 3.113; Fang, The
Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:580, 606).

[139]

These two sentences are also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
2:44.

[140]

Guanqiu Jian has a biography in Sgz, 28.761-768. See also Zhuo, San guo
renwu lun xu ji,
121-127. Guanqiu was a loyal Wei official who had some
success as a military leader. However, when he tried to use his military power
to oppose the Simas, he ultimately failed.

Zhong Hui (225-264) has a biography in Sgz, 28.784-795. He was a Wei
general and a leading supporter of the Sima family in their struggles against
Cao Shuang and his followers for control of the Wei government. After Sima
Zhao gained control of the government, Zhong Hui and Deng Ai [OMITTED] led
the Wei campaign against Shu in 263-264. They defeated Shu, and Zhong
was rewarded with the position of minister over the masses. He apparently
had more grandiose ambitions, however, and mounted a rebellion in Shu in
an attempt to overthrow Sima Zhao. He failed and was killed (Sgz, 4.149,
28.787-793; Wan, Wei Jin Nanbeichao shi lungao, 90-91; Fu, Zhongguo tong
shi,
1:251-252).


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Page 115

Records of the Three States: The Book of Shu

Fascicle 34: Consorts and Sons of the Two Sovereigns

34.905
The Former Sovereign's Empress Gan was a native of Pei. When
the Former Sovereign controlled Yu province [OMITTED] and was living
in Xiao Pei [OMITTED], he accepted her as his concubine.[1] The Former
Sovereign was bereaved of a primary wife on several occasions,
and Empress Gan regularly took charge of affairs in the inner
apartments.[2] She accompanied the Former Sovereign to Jing
province and gave birth to the Latter Sovereign (Hou zhu [OMITTED]).
When Duke Cao's [Cao Cao's] troops caught up with the Former
Sovereign at Changban [OMITTED] in Dangyang [OMITTED], being pressed at
that point, he abandoned his empress and the Latter Sovereign.[3]
Thanks to the protection of Zhao Yun, they escaped harm.[4]

The empress died and was buried at Nanjun [OMITTED].[5] In Zhangwu
[OMITTED] 2 [221/222], he posthumously named her the Lady of
Imperial Regret (Huang Si furen [OMITTED])[6] and was going to
reinter her in Shu. Before her body could arrive, however, the
Former Sovereign died. Chancellor Zhuge Liang memorialized:

The Lady of Imperial Regret conducted herself by cultivating
benevolence, and she was pure and circumspect in her person.
When the late emperor formerly was in supreme command, she
became his consort and bore the Sacred Person [Liu Shan, the
Latter Sovereign]. Her life was not long. When the late emperor
was still alive, he was righteous and beneficent, and he was
concerned that the divine pall of the Lady of Imperial Regret
was adrift far away. He specially sent a commissioner to bring it
back. But it has transpired that the late emperor has died. Now
the divine pall of the Lady of Imperial Regret has arrived, and
the emperor's own coffin is en route. The park and tumulus
are complete, and the time for laying him to rest has been
determined. I have discussed the matter with Grand Master of
Ceremonies (taichang [OMITTED]) Lai Gong [OMITTED] and others.

The Record of Rites says, "Establishing affection by beginning
from one's parents is the way to teach the people filial piety.


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Page 116
Establishing respect by beginning from one's elders is the way to
teach the people obedience."[7] It is from this that not forgetting
one's parents is born. The intent of the Spring and Autumn
Annals
is, "A mother is respected in accordance with her son's
rank."[8] In the past, Gaozu posthumously venerated his father's
Lady of Illustrious Spirit (Zhaoling furen [OMITTED]) with the
title of Empress of Illustrious Spirit (Zhaoling huanghou [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]),[9] and Emperor He the Filial [OMITTED] reburied his mother,
Honorable Lady Liang [OMITTED], and gave her the honorific Empress
of Respectful Recollection (Gonghuai huanghou [OMITTED]).[10]
Emperor Min the Filial [OMITTED] also buried his mother Lady Wang
[OMITTED] and gave her the honorific Empress of Spiritual Recollection
(Linghuai huanghou [OMITTED]).[11] Now, the Lady of Imperial
Regret should also have a title of respect to assuage "the
thoughts of the cold springs."[12] Thus, along with Gong and the
others, we have followed the method of bestowing posthumous
titles, and she ought to be called the Empress of Illustrious
Achievements (Zhaolie huanghou [OMITTED]).[13] The Classic of
Poetry
says,[14] "While alive, they dwelled in separate chambers; /
In death they share a grave."[A] Therefore, the Empress of
34.906
Illustrious Achievements should be buried with the late emperor.
I request that the grand commandant inform the imperial
ancestors and announce it abroad. The preparations for the
rituals and ceremonies will be memorialized separately.

The emperor granted permission.

[A]

The Record of Rites says that in high antiquity there was no burial
together; from middle antiquity on, it existed at times.[15]

The Serene Empress [Wu] of the Former Sovereign (Xian zhu Mu
huanghou [OMITTED]) had her home of record in Chenliu [OMITTED].[16]
Her elder brother was Wu Yi [OMITTED].[17] They became orphans when
they were young. Yi's father had known Liu Yan for a long time,
so he gathered up his family and followed Yan into Shu. Yan was
extremely ambitious. He heard that a skillful physiognomist had
predicted that the empress would be greatly honored. At the time,
Yan had taken his son Mao with him, so he took the empress in
to be Mao's wife. Mao died, and the empress lived alone.

When the Former Sovereign had pacified Yi province and Lady
Sun returned to Wu,[B] his followers advised the Former Sovereign
to make Mao's wife his empress. The Former Sovereign suspected


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Page 117
that he might be of the same lineage as Mao. Fa Zheng[18] came
forward to say, "If one speaks of the distance of the relationship,
is it not like the relationship of [Duke] Wen of Jin to Ziyu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]?"[19] Thereupon, the Former Sovereign took her to be his wife
with the rank of lady.[C] In Jian'an 24 [219/220], he made her
queen of Hanzhong, and in summer, the fifth month of Zhangwu
1 [June 221], he ordered:

We have received the heavenly mandate, been raised to the
position of great respect, and reign over a myriad of states. Now
we take the queen to be empress and dispatch Chancellor Zhuge
Liang, commissioned with a verge, to bestow the seal and
ribbon. She will serve the ancestral temple and be mother over
the empire. Let the empress respect this!

In the fifth month of Jianxing 1 [May/June 223], the Latter
Sovereign acceded to the throne, and he respected her by making
her empress dowager and referring to her as the Palace of
Enduring Joy.[20] Wu Yi rose in office to be general of chariots and
cavalry, and he was appointed prefectural marquis.[21] In Yanxi 8
[245/246], the empress died and was buried with the Former
Sovereign at Hui Tumulus[22] (Huiling [OMITTED]).[D]

[B]

The Han-Jin Spring and Autumn says: When the Former Sovereign
entered Yi province, Wu sent someone to meet Lady Sun.[23] The
consort wanted to take the heir apparent back to Wu, but Zhuge Liang.
sent Zhao Yun to marshal troops to cut off the Yangtze and detain the
heir apparent. He succeeded in stopping them.

[C]

Xi Zuochi says: Marriage is the starting point of human relations and
the basis for kingly transformation. If it is the case that an ordinary
man should not lack propriety, is it not even more so with a ruler of
men? Duke Wen of Jin abandoned propriety and acted expediently in
order to save the situation. Thus Zifan [OMITTED] said, "If you want
something from someone, then you must first assent to his requests. If
one is planning to seize a person's state, then why should one be
concerned about that person's wife?"[24] This teaches us that one does
not act with impropriety without reason. Now, in this case the Former
Sovereign was not in a position in which he had no choice, but [Fa
Zheng] cites an earlier error by way of comparison. This is not
instructing his ruler in the Way of Yao and Shun. The Former
Sovereign was wrong in following his advice.


118

Page 118
[D]

Sun Sheng's Genealogy of Shu (Shu shipu [OMITTED]) says: [Wu] Yi's
grandson Qiao [OMITTED] fell into Li Xiong's [OMITTED] hands for thirty years; he
did not submit to Li Xiong.[25]

34.907
The Latter Sovereign's Attentive and Lamented Empress (Hou zhu
Jing Ai huanghou [OMITTED]) was the eldest daughter of
General of Chariots and Cavalry Zhang Fei. In Zhangwu 1 [221/
222], she was brought in to be consort to the heir apparent.[26] In
Jianxing [OMITTED] 1 [223/224], she was established as empress. She
died in Jianxing 15 [237/238] and was buried at Nan Tumulus
[OMITTED] (Nanling).[27]

Empress Zhang [OMITTED] of the Latter Sovereign was the younger
sister of the Attentive and Lamented Empress. In Jianxing 15 [237/
238], she was brought into the palace as an honorable lady. In the
first month of spring in Yanxi [OMITTED] 1 [238/239], [the Latter
Sovereign] ordered:

We have inherited the great enterprise and undertake to reign
over the empire and make offerings at the suburban altars, the
ancestral temples, and the altars to Soil and Millet.[28] Now we
wish to make the honorable lady our empress and commission
Xiang Lang [OMITTED], acting chancellor and general of the left, to
carry a verge and bestow seal and ribbon on her.[29] Strive to
cultivate domestic duties and perform the sacrifices with
solemnity. Let the empress respect this![30]

In Xianxi 1 [264], when the Latter Sovereign was moved to
Luoyang[31] she accompanied him.[E]

[E]

The Han-Jin Spring and Autumn says: When Wei gave the palace
women of Shu to the Wei generals who had no wives, Brilliant
Companion Li declared, "I cannot suffer indignities two and three
times," and killed herself.[32]

Liu Yong, appellative Gongshou [OMITTED], was son of the Former
Sovereign and half brother of the Latter Sovereign. In the sixth
month of Zhangwu 1 [July 221], [the Former Sovereign, Liu Bei]
sent Minister over the Masses [Xu] Jing [OMITTED][33] to install Yong as
king of Lu, and the patent said:

Our younger son Yong has received the green regions.[34] We have
had bestowed on us the heavenly office and have inherited the


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great enterprise. Revere and follow the ancient precedents and
establish your state. You are appointed to a benefice in the
eastern regions, which is grandly endowed with Mounts Gui [OMITTED]
and Meng [OMITTED][35] and through the ages has supported us on the
marches. Ah! Respect our decree! In the state of Lu, all changes
to fit with the Way; the civilizing influence exists there. The
fondness of the people for virtue—for generations this worthiness
has continued. May the king retain his conscience and follow
propriety. Pacify your officers and people and [Heaven] will
accept your sacrifices and consider them good.[36] Let the king
respect this!

In Jianxing 8 [230/231], his appointment was changed, and he
was made king of Ganling [OMITTED].[37]

From the first, Yong had detested the eunuch Huang Hao.[38]
After Hao gained a position of trust, he slandered Yong to the
Latter Sovereign. The Latter Sovereign gradually distanced himself
from Yong to the extent that Yong could not gain an audience at
court for more than ten years. In Xianxi 1 [264/265], Yong was
moved to Luoyang, where he was made chief commandant of
chariots and was appointed district marquis.

34.908
Liu Li, appellative Fengxiao [OMITTED], was also the Latter Sovereign's
half brother, though of a different mother from Yong. In the sixth
month of Zhangwu 1 [July 221], the Former Sovereign sent
Minister over the Masses Xu Jing to install Li as king of Liang
[OMITTED].[39] The patent of appointment said:

To our small son Li: We have acceded to the Han order. We
reverently follow the heavenly mandate, and we observe and
cultivate the proper standards. We establish you in the East and
make you a bulwark for the Han. Now, the land of Liang is in
the territory of the imperial capital. The people are used to being
civilized and are easily led with propriety. Go with all your
mind, cherish and protect the people, and thereby make your
state long-lived. Let the king respect this!

In Jianxing 8 [230/231], the Latter Sovereign reappointed Li as
king of Anping.[40] In Yanxi 7 [244/245], Li died. Posthumously he
was called the Mourned King [OMITTED]. He was succeeded by his son
Yin [OMITTED], the Lamented King [OMITTED], who passed away in Yanxi 19
[256/257]. His son Cheng [OMITTED], the King of Youthful Demise [OMITTED],
died in Yanxi 20 [257/258].


120

Page 120

In Jingyao [OMITTED] 4 [261/262], the Latter Sovereign issued an edict:

The king of Anping was commissioned by the first emperor.
Three generations running have died young, and the kingdom's
succession has come to an end. I am grieved! Let Ji [OMITTED], marquis
of Wuyi [OMITTED], succeed to the position of king.

Ji was Li's son. In Xianxi 1 [264/265], he was moved eastward
to Luoyang, where he was appointed commandant-in-chief of
chariots and appointed marquis of a district.

The Latter Sovereign's heir apparent Xuan had the appellative
Wenheng [OMITTED]. His mother was Honorable Lady Wang [OMITTED], who
originally was an attendant to the Attentive and Lamented Empress
Zhang. In the first month of Yanxi 1 [January 238], the Latter
Sovereign issued a patent of appointment that said:

Among the kings and emperors of the past; establishing a
successor to the throne as heir apparent to assist in the
administration of the state has been a regular practice throughout
history. Now we make Xuan our heir apparent to illuminate the
majesty of our ancestors. We commission Xiang Lang, acting
chancellor and general of the left, to carry a verge and bestow
the seal and ribbon. Let Xuan diligently cultivate an elegant
nature, be faithful to correct principles, inquire into ritual, be
respectful to his mentors, consider the goodness of the masses,
and nurture his virtue. How can he not devote himself to self-cultivation
in order to improve himself!

At the time, Xuan was fifteen years old. In the winter of
Jingyao 6 [263], Shu fell. In the first month of Xianxi 1 [February/
March 264], Zhong Hui[41] rebelled at Chengdu [OMITTED] and Xuan
was killed by the rebelling troops.[F]

[F]

Sun Sheng's Genealogy of Shu says: Xuan had six younger brothers:
Yao, Cong [OMITTED], Zan [OMITTED], Chen [OMITTED], Xun [OMITTED], and Qu [OMITTED]. When Shu fell,
Chen committed suicide, and the others were all relocated to the capital
environs [Luoyang]. During the Yongjia [OMITTED] upheavals, their
descendants were wiped out. Only Yong's grandson Xuan fled to Shu,
and Li Xiong spuriously appointed him Duke of Peaceful Joy (Anle
gong [OMITTED]) to perform sacrifices to Liu Shan's descendants. In
Yonghe [OMITTED] 3 [347/348], when the Jin attacked Li Shi [OMITTED], I,
Sheng, participated in the expedition and saw Xuan at Chengdu.[42]


121

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The evaluation says: The Changes says, "Once there are husband
and wife, there are father and son."[43] As the beginning of human
relations and the epitome of the way of benevolence, there is
nothing that surpasses this. Therefore, this record has been made
as a means of ascertaining this principle's embodiment in one
state.

 
[1]

Xiao Pei or "Lesser Pei" was another name for Pei prefecture, administrative
seat of the kingdom of Pei, located at the modern city of Pei in the northern
part of modern Jiangsu. Liu Bei, the Former Sovereign (Xian zhu [OMITTED]), was
at this time (194-195) shepherd (mu [OMITTED]) of Yu province. The Shi yi ji [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] [Record of Collected Remnants] contains the following tale about Empress
Gan:

Empress Gan of the Former Sovereign was a native of Pei. She was
born of lowly origins in a small village. A physiognomist said of her,


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Page 208
"This girl shall occupy a high place in the side apartments of the
ultimate palace (ji gong [OMITTED])." When the empress was grown, her
appearance was especially striking. When she reached eighteen, she
had a beautiful body and soft flesh, and she was seductive and
bewitching. The Former Sovereign summoned her within the silken
curtains. To anyone who gazed upon her from outside the window,
she was like drifted snow beneath the moon.

He'nan presented a jade figure that was three feet tall. The Former
Sovereign placed the jade figure in the empress's side apartments.
During the day he discussed military strategy and at night he
embraced the empress and amused himself with the jade figure. He
often exclaimed, "The nobility and virtue of jade is equal to that of
a gentleman (junzi [OMITTED]). How could it be made into the shape of
a person and one not amuse oneself with it?" The empress and the
jade figure were equally white and sleek, and people looking at them
nearly confused them. The favorites were not only envious of Empress
Gan but also of the jade figure. The empress often wanted to grind
it up and destroy it. She admonished the Former Sovereign, "In the
past, Zihan [OMITTED] did not consider jade precious, and the Spring and
Autumn Annuals
praised him. Now, Wu and Wei have not yet been
exterminated; how can you continue to cherish a bewitching trifle?
Infatuation always gives rise to suspicion. Do not repeatedly fall into
it."

The Former Sovereign thereupon got rid of the jade figure. The
favorites all withdrew and remained distant from her. At the time
superior men spoke of Empress Gan as though she were a woman
of supernatural understanding.

(Syj, 8.7b-8a; cf. Foster, "The Shih-i
chi
and Its Relationship to the Genre Known as Chih-kuai hsiao-shuo,"
263-264)

The reference to Zihan comes from Zuo zhuan, Xian 15: "A man of Song
found a gem, and presented it to Zihan, who would not receive it. The man
said, `I showed it to a lapidary, who considered it to be valuable, and therefore
I ventured to offer it to you.' Zihan said, `What I consider valuable is not to
be covetous; what you consider valuable is your gem. If you give it to me,
we shall both lose what we consider to be valuable; we had better each keep
his own' " (Legge, The Chinese Classics, 5:470).

[2]

Being married to Liu Bei seems to have been a risky proposition. On two
occasions his wife of the moment was captured, once by Lü Bu and another
time by Cao Cao, and on this third occasion he was forced to abandon his
wife while fleeing Cao Cao's armies (Sgz, 9.277, 32.874, 875, 878, 38.969;
Hygz, 6.511-512, 515, 519). See also Chapter 4 above, in the section
"Marriage Patterns." Readers of this passage almost inevitably recall Xiang
Yu's [OMITTED] capture of Liu Bang's family. See Sj, 8.371; Watson, Records of the
Grand Historian: Han Dynasty,
1:68.

[3]

Dangyang was in the vicinity of the county by the same name in modern Hubei.
Changban has been identified as a site northeast of the modern county seat,
perhaps Mount Tianzhu [OMITTED]. See Su, San guo zhi jin zhu jin yi, 2:1861; Sgz
cidian,
230.

[4]

Zhao Yun originally served Gongsun Zan [OMITTED]. When Gongsun ordered
Liu Bei to help Tian Kai [OMITTED] stop Yuan Shao, Zhao Yun accompanied him


209

Page 209
and was in charge of the cavalry. After his rescue of the future empress and
Liu Shan, Zhao became one of Liu Bei's generals and served him faithfully
until death (Sgz, 36.948-950).

[5]

Nanjun refers to the administrative seat of Nan commandery, also the seat
of Jing province. It was located on the Yangtze in the vicinity of modern
Jiangling [OMITTED], just south of where Liu abandoned Empress Gan. During his
struggles with Cao Cao and Sun Quan, Liu's activities were often centered in
this region.

[6]

See Wang, Shi fa yanjiu, 370-371; cf. Sf, 2.9a.

[7]

Cf. Lj, 47.10b, which has mu [OMITTED] ("harmony") rather than the xiao [OMITTED] ("filial
piety") that appears here. Furthermore, the redaction in Shisan appears to have
an error here—jiao [OMITTED] ("teach") instead of the orthograpically similar jing [OMITTED]
("respect"). For another translation of the passage, see Legge, Lî Kî, 2:217.

[8]

The quotation is from the Gongyang Commentary under the year Yin 1. See
Chunqiu jingzhuan yinde, 1.

[9]

In fact it was not Emperor Gao who bestowed this title on his mother, but
Empress Lü. Emperor Gao posthumously gave her the title Lady of Illustrious
Spirit after he became emperor. Empress Lü added the title "empress" in the
seventh year of her reign (Hs, 1B.52, 3.99-100; Sgz jijie, 34.2a).

[10]

See HHs, 4.184. It is interesting that Zhuge Liang uses this example, for Lady
Liang had recently been stripped of the title empress, in 190, by Emperor Xian.
See Chapter 3, note 50.

[11]

Emperor Min refers to Emperor Xian (Liu Xie) of the Later Han. Min, which
means something like "beleaguered," was a posthumous title bestowed by Liu
Bei on Liu Xie after he was deposed by Cao Pi. Liu Bei adopted mourning
and treated the event as though the emperor had actually died (Sgz, 32.887;
Wang, Shi fa yanjiu, 53, 430-431). Following his death in 234, the Wei
bestowed on Liu Xie the title of Emperor Xian the Filial (HHs, 9.391), by
which title he was subsequently known. Zhuge Liang uses Min here in order
to deny the legitimacy of the Wei regime (Qian, San guo zhi bianyi, 2.2b). After
the title of Empress of Spiritual Recollection was bestowed, the empress was
reburied at Wenzhao Tumulus (Wenzhao ling [OMITTED]) with Emperor Ling
(HHs, 9.375, 10B.450).

[12]

"Cold springs" (han quan [OMITTED]) comes from the Classic of Poetry (Mao shi
32), a poem that is traditionally interpreted as having to do with the
appreciation due a mother. See Legge, The Chinese Classics, 4:42 (prole-gomena),
50-51.

[13]

Liu Bei's posthumous title was Emperor of Illustrious Achievements.

[14]

Mao shi 73.

[15]

See Lj, 6.4a. Ji Wuzi [OMITTED] of Lu [OMITTED] permitted a joint burial, but he pointed
out that it had not been the practice in high antiquity and this had not changed
since the Duke of Zhou.

[16]

Empress Wu's biography is also translated in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
1:67. Chenliu occupied a portion of modern He'nan province.

[17]

Wu Yi, originally from Chenliu, went with Liu Yan to Shu, and he served as
leader of the gentlemen-of-the-household under Liu Zhang. He commanded
troops against Liu Bei at Fu [OMITTED] and surrendered to him. Once Liu Bei had
pacified Yi province, he made Wu Yi commissioner over the army (hu jun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]) and general for punishing rebels (tao ni jiangjun [OMITTED]). Subsequently,


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Page 210
he held a number of increasingly important positions under Liu Bei and Liu
Shan until his death in 237/238 (Sgz, 45.1083-1084; Hygz, 6.536). Yi's name
was originally written [OMITTED] but seems to have been changed by Chen Shou to
avoid the taboo on Sima Yi's name (Hygz, 5.489n; Zztj, 69.2188; Fang, The
Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms,
1:67-68).

[18]

Fa Zheng's home was in Fufeng [OMITTED], but at the beginning of the Jian'an period
he went to Shu to escape famine. He held several minor positions under Liu
Zhang, who sent him as an emissary to Liu Bei to persuade him to join in
attacking the religious rebel Zhang Lu in order to forestall Cao Cao's launching
a campaign into Yi province against Zhang. After Fa Zheng delivered the
message, he secretly advised Liu on how to displace Liu Zhang and take control
of Yi province. Subsequently, Fa became one of Liu Bei's supporters and
strategists in the struggle against Cao Cao. After Liu Bei became king of
Hanzhong [OMITTED], he made Fa Zheng his prefect of the masters of writing and
commissioner of the army.

[19]

On Ziyu and Duke Wen (Chong'er [OMITTED]), see note 24 below. Cf. Hygz, 6.524.

[20]

The Palace of Enduring Joy (Changle gong [OMITTED]) was occupied by the
empresses dowager, who were commonly referred to by the name of the palace
as a means of respect.

[21]

Wu Yi was made marquis of Jiyang [OMITTED], whose location is uncertain (Sgz,
45.1083).

[22]

The location of Hui Tumulus is unknown.

[23]

Lady Sun was Sun Quan's younger sister, whom he gave in marriage to Liu
Bei when Liu was shepherd of Jing province, and who was apparently very
formidable (see also the discussion and note 3 in Chapter 4 above). She is said
to have been tough and to have had over a hundred female attendants who
went about armed. Every time Liu Bei saw her, "his heart turned cold." So
daunting was she that Fa Zheng advised Liu Bei to send her back, and Zhuge
Liang considered her capable of instigating an uprising in support of her
brother. When Sun Quan learned of Liu Bei's western campaign in 211, he
sent a boat to fetch her back. She tried to take Liu Shan with her but was
stopped by Zhao Yun and Zhang Fei (Yun biezhuan [OMITTED] [Alternative
Biography of Zhao Yun], quoted in Sgz, 36.949, commentary; Sgz, 37.960;
Hygz, 6.520, 525; Zztj, 66.2099, 2111; de Crespigny, To Establish Peace,
2:407, 431, 475; de Crespigny, Generals of the South, 294, 294-295n, 371).
Significantly, neither Chen Shou nor Chang Qu, author of Hygz, wrote a
biography for her.

[24]

This is a reference to an incident in the seventh century B.C. When the heir
apparent to the Jin throne, Ziyu, went to Qin as a hostage, the earl of Qin
gave him a wife named Ying [OMITTED]. Five years later, Ziyu fled to Jin, leaving the
wife behind. The following year, his father Duke Hui of Jin [OMITTED] died, and
Ziyu succeeded him as Duke Huai [OMITTED]. Chong'er, who was Ziyu's uncle (he
was a half brother of Duke Hui, his mother being a sister of Duke Hui's mother)
and a rival for the throne, fled to Qin. There the earl presented him with five
women, one of whom was this very Ying, who had been Ziyu's wife. Chong'er
was reluctant to accept her because he and Ziyu were of the same lineage.
One of his followers said to him, "You are going to attack his state. Why worry
about his former wife? If you accept her in order to cement relations with Qin,
then you can ask [Qin's help] in entering [Jin]. Would you insist on adhering
to a minor point of etiquette and forgetting a major shame?!" (Sj, 39.1660;


211

Page 211
cf. Gy, 9.329, 10.355-356; Thatcher, "Marriages of the Ruling Elite in the
Spring and Autumn Period," 51-52n).

[25]

A non-Chinese of Cong [OMITTED] origins, Li Xiong was the ruler of a petty state,
Cheng Han [OMITTED], in what is now modern Sichuan. He declared himself
emperor in 304 and ruled for thirty years (Js, 121.3035-3040; Hygz, 9.661701;
Wang, Wei Jin Nanbeichao shi, 1:224-228).

[26]

See Chapter 4, note 21 above.

[27]

The location of Nan Tumulus is unknown. Sgz, 33.897 gives the date of the
death of the Attentive and Lamented Empress Zhang as summer, the sixth
month (10 July-7 August) of Jianxing 15. For another rendering of her
biography, see Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:548.

[28]

These were sacrifices normally offered by the Han emperors. The sacrifices at
the suburban altars (jiao [OMITTED]) were performed seasonally. Originally offered
to the Five Di, following the reforms of 31 B.C., they were done in honor of
Heaven and Earth. The Later Han continued to offer the sacrifices based on
the reforms. After the breakup of the Han into the Three States, each of the
three instituted its own altars for conducting suburban sacrifices. Altars to Soil
and Millet could be established not only at the national level but also in
kingdoms and marquisates. It was not necessary to set up both types of altars,
and the altar to Soil appears to have been more common, especially outside
the capital. The term "altars to Soil and Millet" was sometimes synonymous
with the state (Xu, Xi Han huigao 10:81-86, 11:92-93; DHhy, 3:27, 4:33,
5:41; Sghy, 11.202-206, 209; Yang, Han Wei zhidu congkao, 394-395;
Loewe, Crisis and Conflict in Han China, 167, 170, 174-175, 179, 183).

[29]

Xiang Lang was a prefectural magistrate in Jing province under Liu Biao.
Following Liu Biao's death, Xiang became one of Liu Bei's supporters, and
after Liu gained control of Shu, Xiang was successively administrator of several
commanderies. After Liu Bei died, Xiang held several offices under the Latter
Sovereign until he had a falling out with Zhuge Liang, after which he was
dismissed for a time. Following the death of Zhuge Liang, he was made general
of the left and appointed marquis of Xianming commune (Xianming tinghou
[OMITTED]). He died in Yanxi 10 (247/248; see Sgz, 41.1010).

[30]

Sgz, 33.897 says, "In spring, the fifth month of Yanxi 1 (February 238), [the
Latter Sovereign] made Madam Zhang empress. He declared a general amnesty
and changed the reign title. He made his son Xuan [OMITTED] heir apparent and his
son Yao [OMITTED] king of Anding [OMITTED]." Cf. Fang, The Chronicle of the Three
Kingdoms,
1:571, 588.

[31]

Following the Wei conquest of Shu, Liu Shan, his sons, and many of his
supporters were moved to Luoyang, where they were given sinecures (Sgz,
33.901-902).

[32]

Nothing else is known of Brilliant Companion Li.

[33]

Xu Jing, a native of Ru'nan, held office under Dong Zhuo when the latter
took control of the government following the death of Emperor Ling. Xu was
involved in recommending a number of persons for office, and once they had
assumed their posts, they began to oppose Dong. Xu was forced to flee for
his life. Because of Xu's ability, Liu Zhang invited him to Shu and appointed
him administrator of Ba and Guanghan. After Liu Bei conquered Shu, he
appointed Xu to a series of offices culminating, after Liu assumed the imperial
title, in grand tutor (Sgz, 38.963-967).

[34]

Green was the color associated with the East, where Lu was located. At the
time, the region was under control of the Wei. By nominally appointing Liu
Yong to a benefice there, Liu Bei was asserting his legitimacy over all the empire.
Sun Quan also followed this practice (Js, 14.414; Zztj, 69.2189).

[35]

Mt. Gui and Mt. Meng were synonymous with the Lu state. Mt. Gui is in
northeastern Sishui [OMITTED] county and Mt. Meng is in southern Mengyin [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] county, both in Shandong province. Both are part of the Mengshan range.
This line is an allusion to the Classic of Poetry (Mao shi 300).

[36]

This, too, is an allusion to Mao shi 300. Our rendering of the sentence follows
Imataka, Inami, and Kominami, Sangoku shi, 2:351 n. 5.

[37]

Ganling straddled the border between present-day Shandong and Hebei, and
at the time was under the control of Wei.

[38]

Huang Hao was a eunuch who became a favorite of Liu Shan. His baleful
influence over Liu and the government from about 258 on is credited with
contributing to Shu's decline (Sgz, 33.899, 39.987, 44.1066; Wang, Wei Jin
Nanbeichao shi,
1:96).

[39]

This is another case of appointing a scion of the Liu house to a kingdom that
was under the control of the Wei. Liang was in modern eastern He'nan near
Shangqiu [OMITTED] city.

[40]

Anping was in eastern Hebei in the vicinity of modern Anping, Hengshui [OMITTED]
[OMITTED], and neighboring counties. It, too, was under Wei control.

[41]

On Zhong Hui, see Fascicle 5, note 140 above. Liu Xuan's biography is also
in Fang, The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, 1:589.

[42]

Li Shi became ruler of the Cheng Han in 338, following the death of his father
Li Shou [OMITTED], who had emerged as ruler of the Cheng Han after the struggles
over the throne following the death of Li Xiong in 334. In 346/347, Huan
Wen [OMITTED] (312-373), then commander-in-chief and provincial inspector of
Jing province, took advantage of the internal political struggle and chaos in
Cheng Han and launched an expedition into Southwest China, destroying the
Cheng Han and forcing Li Shi to surrender (Js, 8.191, 98.2569, 121.30473048;
Wang, Wei Jin Nanbeichao shigang, 1:227-228). Sun says that Li
"spuriously appointed" Xuan because he did not consider Li to be the
legitimate ruler.

[43]

See Chapter 3 above, in the section "Women in Pre-Qin Thought."


122

Page 122

Records of the Three States: The Book of Wu

Fascicle 50: Consorts and Concubines

50.1195
Sun the Caitiff Smasher's [OMITTED][1] Lady Wu was the mother of the
sovereign of Wu, Sun Quan. Originally a native of Wu, she moved
to Qiantang.[2] She lost her parents very early and lived with her
younger brother [Wu] Jing. Sun Jian heard of her talent and
beauty and wanted to marry her. Her relatives in the Wu family,
detesting Jian's frivolity and craftiness, were going to resist him.
Jian was mortified by this. Lady Wu spoke to her relatives, "Why
court trouble for the sake of one daughter? If I am to be unlucky,
that is my fate."[3] Thereupon they consented to the marriage, and
she bore him four sons and one[4] daughter.[A]

[A]

The Record of Searching for Spirits (Sou shen ji [OMITTED]) says: At first
when the lady was pregnant, she dreamed that the moon entered her
bosom. Afterward, she gave birth to Ce. When she became pregnant
with Quan, she dreamed that the sun entered her bosom. She reported
to Jian, "Earlier, when I was pregnant with Ce, I dreamed that the
moon entered my bosom. Now I have dreamed this time that the sun
entered my bosom. What does it mean?" Jian replied, "The sun and
moon are the essences of yin and yang. It is an extremely noble sign.
My descendants will flourish!"[5]

Jing always followed Jian and was meritorious in battle. He was
appointed chief commandant of cavalry.[6] Yuan Shu recommended
Jing to be grand administrator of Danyang [OMITTED].[7] He attacked the
former grand administrator, Zhou Xin [OMITTED], and occupied his
commandery. Sun Ce, Sun He [OMITTED], and Lü Fan entrusted
themselves to Jing.[8] They combined their masses and together
attacked the bandit of Jing [OMITTED] prefecture, Zu Lang [OMITTED].[9] Lang
was defeated and fled. It happened that Jing was being pressed by
Liu Yao [OMITTED], so he returned northward to rely on Yuan Shu.[10]
Shu made him general of the gentlemen-of-the-household for
investigation of the army (dujun zhonglang jiang [OMITTED]).


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Together with Sun Ben, they attacked Fan Neng [OMITTED] and Yu Mi
[OMITTED] at Hengjiang [OMITTED],[11] then struck at Ze Rong [OMITTED] and Xue
Li [OMITTED] at Moling [OMITTED].[12] At the time, Sun Ce was wounded at
Niuzhu [OMITTED].[13] When the bandits who had surrendered rebelled,
Jing attacked and captured them all. Then he attacked Liu Yao,
who fled to Yuzhang [OMITTED].[14] Sun Ce dispatched Jing and Ben to
Shouchun to report to Yuan Shu.[15] Shu forthwith fought with Liu
Bei over Xu province.[16] He appointed Jing grand administrator of
Guangling. Yuan Shu later usurped the throne, and Sun Ce wrote
exhorting him [to desist].[17] Shu refused. [Ce] then cut the ford
across the Yangtze, ending intercourse [with Yuan Shu], and sent
50.1196
someone to notify Jing. Jing abandoned his commandery and
returned eastward. Ce restored Jing as the grand administrator of
Danyang. The Han sent Gentleman Consultant (yilang [OMITTED])
Wang Pu [OMITTED] under orders to tour the South, and he memorialized,
appointing Jing general displaying martial virtue (yangwu
jiangjun
[OMITTED]).[18] Jing remained in charge of the commandery.

When Sun Quan took charge of the affairs of state while still a
youth, Lady Wu assisted in administering the army and state, and
she was a great help.[B] In Jian'an 7 [202/203], as she approached
death, she called to her Zhang Zhao [OMITTED] and some others and
entrusted them with matters after her death.[19] She was buried with
[her husband] at Gao Tumulus[20] (Gaoling).[C]

[B]

Standard Record of Guiji (Guiji dianlu [OMITTED]) says: Sun Ce's [head
of the] Bureau of Merit (Gong cao [OMITTED]), Wei Teng [OMITTED], scolded Ce
because he disagreed with him.[21] Ce was going to kill him. All the
officials were worried and frightened but could come up with no plan.
Lady Wu, who was leaning against a large well, said to Ce, "You are
newly established in Jiangnan and matters have not yet been pulled
together. You ought to be treating worthies well and being courteous to
gentlemen, ignoring errors and recording merit. Wei of the Bureau of
Merit enforces the rules completely in office. If you kill him today, then
tomorrow everyone will rebel against you. I could not bear to see such
an extreme error. I should throw myself into this well first." Ce was
greatly frightened and immediately released Teng. Such was Lady Wu's
shrewd advice.[22]

[C]

The Forest of Resolve (Zhilin [OMITTED]) says: The recommendation records
for Guiji are blank for Jian'an 12-13 [207-209]. When there were no
recommendees, it meant the commandery administrator was in
mourning. In this case, it was because the queen of Wu died in the


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twelfth year.[23] In the eighth and ninth years there were recommendations.
This makes it very clear.

In Jian'an 8 [203/204], Jing died in office. His son Fen [OMITTED] was
given his troops, made a general, and appointed marquis of Xin
commune (Xin ting hou [OMITTED]).[24] He died[D] and his son An [OMITTED]
succeeded him. An was sentenced to death for belonging to the
faction of the King of Lu [OMITTED], [Sun] Ba [OMITTED].[25] Fen's younger
brother Qi [OMITTED] succeeded him[E] and was appointed capital commune
marquis.[26] He died. His son Zuan [OMITTED] succeeded him. Zuan's wife
was Teng Yin's [OMITTED] daughter.[27] When Yin was executed, they
suffered the same fate.

[D]

The Wu History says: Quan chastised Jing province and appointed Fen
commander-in-chief (dudu [OMITTED]) of Wu commandery to garrison the
East.

[E]

The Wu History says: Qi was good friends with Zhang Wen [OMITTED] and
Gu Tan [OMITTED]. Quan ordered them to evaluate and settle litigation.

Lady Xie of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan had her home of
record in Shanyin [OMITTED] in Guiji. Her father Jiong [OMITTED] was a
gentleman of the masters of writing and prefect of Xu under the
Han.[F] Sun Quan's mother arranged on Quan's behalf for her to be
his wife, and she was loved and greatly favored. Later, Quan took
in his aunt's granddaughter, Miss Xu, and wished to put Xie
beneath her. Xie was unwilling, and as a result she became
depressed and died early. Ten years later, her younger brother
Cheng [OMITTED] was appointed gentleman-of-the-household for all
purposes (wuguan langzhong [OMITTED]). Shortly thereafter he was
transferred to become chief commandant of the Eastern Region of
Changsha and grand administrator of Wuling [OMITTED].[28] He wrote a
Hou Han shu [OMITTED] [Later Han History][29] in one hundred
fascicles.[G]

[F]

Jiong's son, Cheng, wrote a Later Han History. Jiong was praised as a
youngster for making benevolence and filial piety his modes of conduct.
He was perspicacious and had excellent talent. Jiong's brother Zhen [OMITTED]
strictly observed the standards of behavior. He was diligent in study
and esteemed righteousness and was recommended as filially pious and
incorrupt. He became prefect of Jianchang [OMITTED] and died in office.[30]

[G]

The Standard Record of Guiji says: Cheng's appellative was Weiping
[OMITTED]. He studied widely and was knowledgeable. Once he had learned


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something, he would remember it the rest of his life. His son Chong
[OMITTED] was a general displaying majesty (yangwei jiangjun [OMITTED]).
Chong's younger brother Xu [OMITTED] was administrator of Wu commandery.
Both were well known.

50.1197
Lady Xu of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan had her home of
record in Fuchun [OMITTED] in Wu commandery.[31] Her grandfather,
Zhen, and Quan's father, Jian, were very close. Jian married his
younger sister to Zhen, and she gave birth to Kun. When Kun was
young, he served in commandery and provincial administrations.
During the chaos at the end of the Han, he left office. He
followed Jian into battle, was meritorious, and was appointed
lieutenant general (pian jiangjun [OMITTED]). When Jian died, Kun
followed Sun Ce in attacking Fan Neng, Yu Mi, and others at
Hengjiang. He struck at Zhang Ying [OMITTED] at Danglikou [OMITTED],
but there were few boats, so he was going to bivouac his troops
and seek more.[32] At the time, Kun's mother was with the army,
and she said to him, "I fear that the senior provincial officials will
launch waterborne troops to oppose you.[33] That would be
disastrous! How can you encamp? You should cut reeds to make
rafts.[H] These could supplement the boats to ferry your troops."
Kun reported the plan to Sun Ce, who immediately carried it
out. The entire body forded the rivers and devastated Ying. They
drove off Ze Rong and Liu Yao, and the task was settled. Ce
memorialized to have Kun made commandery administrator of
Danyang.[I]

It happened that Wu Jing abandoned Guangling to come east
and was restored as administrator of Danyang. Kun took
command of the troops as leader of the gentlemen-of-the-household
for investigating the army. He joined in destroying
Grand Administrator Li Shu [OMITTED] of Lujiang and was appointed
marquis of Guangde [OMITTED] and transferred to be general for the
pacification of brigands (pinglu jiangjun [OMITTED]).[34] Later, he
participated in attacking Huang Zu [OMITTED] and was struck by an
arrow and killed.[35]

[H]

[OMITTED] is pronounced fu [OMITTED] [phjuo].[36] Guo Pu's commentary to the
Dialects [Fang yan [OMITTED]] says, "A [OMITTED] is a raft (pai [OMITTED]) in the water."

[I]

Biographies from beyond the Yangtze says: At first Yuan Shu sent his
cousin [Yuan] Yin [OMITTED] to take charge of Danyang. Sun Ce ordered Kun
to attack and replace him. It happened that Jing returned. When he
had formerly served in Danyang, Jing had been generous and


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Page 126
benevolent and had won over the people, so the functionaries and
people longed for him. Moreover, Kun had many soldiers under his
command, and Ce was envious of his great importance. Ce was about
to launch an attack and could use Kun's troops, so he again appointed
Jing and ordered Kun to return to Wu.

Kun begat Lady Xu, and initially she was married to Lu Shang
[OMITTED] of the same commandery. Shang died, and Quan was serving
as brigand-punishing general (taolu jiangjun [OMITTED]) in Wu. He
took her to be his concubine and had her raise his son Deng.
Later, when Quan was transferred, because she was jealous, he
abandoned her in Wu. After ten years or so, when Quan was king
of Wu and assumed the title of respect, Deng was made heir
apparent.[37] All the ministers requested that the lady be established
as empress. Quan, however, having settled on Lady Bu, did not
assent.[38] Later, she died of illness. Her elder brother Jiao [OMITTED]
succeeded his father Kun as marquis and attacked and pacified the
Mountain Yue. He was appointed lieutenant general. He preceded

50.1198
his sister in death and left no children. His younger brother Zuo
[OMITTED] succeeded to his appointment, and he, too, because of glory in
battle, advanced to be supervisor of Wuhu [OMITTED] and general who
pacifies Wei (ping Wei jiangjun [OMITTED]).

Lady Bu of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan, whose home of
record was Huaiyin [OMITTED] in Linhuai [OMITTED] commandery,[39] belonged
to the same lineage as chancellor [Bu] Zhi.[40] At the end of the
Han, her mother was about to take her to Lujiang. But Lujiang
was destroyed by Sun Ce, so they crossed the Yangtze to the
south. Because of her beauty, she obtained Quan's favor, and he
made her the favorite of the rear apartments. She bore two
daughters. The eldest was called Luban, appellative "Big Tiger"
(Dahu [OMITTED]). Initially, she was betrothed to Zhou Yu's son Xun;
later she was betrothed to Quan Cong.[41] The younger daughter
was Luyu [OMITTED], appellative "Little Tiger" (Xiaohu [OMITTED]). At first
she was betrothed to Zhu Ju [OMITTED];[42] later she was betrothed to
Liu Zuan [OMITTED].[J]

[J]

The Progress of Wu says: Zuan first wed Sun Quan's middle daughter,
but she died early. Therefore, he took Little Tiger as his second wife.

Consort Bu was not by nature jealous, and because many were
promoted by her, she was long the object of fond treatment. When
Quan was king and emperor, he desired to make her his principal


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wife. His ministers, however, argued for Lady Xu. Quan put it off
for more than ten years, though within the palace everyone called
her "empress," and relatives who sent up communications to
her addressed her as "Within the Palace." When she died, subordinates,
in accordance with Quan's intent, requested that her
title be posthumously rectified and that she be given a seal and
ribbon, and they ordered:

On wuzi [OMITTED] in the intercalary month of Chiwu 1 [24
November 238],[43] the emperor said, "Alas, my empress! It was
she who assisted with the mandate, and together we shouldered
Heaven and Earth. Devout and respectful morning and night, she
shared my labors. In the wifely teachings she was well educated,
and in righteousness and propriety she did not stray. Expansive
and kind, she had tender virtue. The people and ministers looked
up to her, and she was in the hearts of those far and near.
Because the difficulties of the time were as yet unsettled and
unification of the country was still incomplete, I followed her
fine intentions and cherished her modesty and humility. For this
reason, at the time I never bestowed the title. Furthermore, I was
sure that her Heaven-granted years would be long and that with
me she would respond to and spread Heaven's blessings.
Suddenly, before I realized it, her life recently came to an end. I
regret that my original intention was not made manifest earlier
and am grief-stricken that she has died and not fulfilled her
Heaven-sent blessings. In the extremity of my grief, the pain
stabs my heart. Now I charge Chancellor Commissioned with a
Verge [Gu] Yong [OMITTED], marquis of Liling [OMITTED], to carry
respectfully the patent, bestow the title, and offer a sacrifice to
the former empress.[44] If her soul is still able to apprehend, may
she rejoice in this favor and glory. Alas, my grief!"

She was buried at Jiang Tumulus (Jiangling [OMITTED]).[45]

50.1199
Lady Wang of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan[46] had her home of
record in Langye.[K] The lady was selected to enter the palace, and
during the Huangwu [OMITTED] period [222-229] she was favored and
gave birth to Sun He.[47] She was the favorite after Madam Bu.
Following the death of Madam Bu, Sun He was made heir
apparent. Sun Quan was going to make her his empress, but
Princess Quan [Sun Luban] had always hated the consort and
slandered her little by little. When Sun Quan became bedridden,
she said that the lady looked happy. Consequently, he became

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profoundly angry, causing Lady Wang to die of worry.[48] When Sun
He's son Hao was established as sovereign, he gave Lady Wang
the posthumous title Empress of Great Exemplarity (Da yi
huanghou [OMITTED]) and appointed her three younger brothers
full marquises.[49]

[K]

The Wu History says: Lady Wang's father was named Lujiu [OMITTED].[50]

Lady Wang of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan had her home of
record in Nanyang. She was chosen to enter the palace, and
during the Jiahe [OMITTED] period [232-238][51] she gained favor and
gave birth to Sun Xiu.[52] When Sun He became heir apparent, his
mother was honored and esteemed, and all the concubines who
had been favored were exiled from the palace. Lady Wang was
sent to Gongan [OMITTED],[53] where she died and was buried. When Xiu
ascended the throne, he dispatched a commissioner to bestow the
posthumous title of Empress of Attentive Recollection (Jinghuai
huanghou [OMITTED]), and she was reinterred at Jing Tumulus
(Jingling [OMITTED]).[54] The Wangs had no descendants, so Xiu
appointed her uterine younger half brother a commune marquis.

Lady Pan of the Sovereign of Wu [Sun] Quan had her home of
record in Juzhang [OMITTED] in Guiji.[55] Her father was a clerk and had
been convicted and sentenced to death. The lady and her elder
sister were both brought to the Weaving Chamber (Zhi shi [OMITTED]),[56]
where Quan saw her and, being struck by her, summoned her to
occupy the rear palace. She was favored and became pregnant. She
dreamed that she was presented with a dragon's head and that she
received it with an apron.[57] Subsequently, she gave birth to Sun
Liang. In Chiwu 13 [250/251], Liang was made heir apparent,[58]
and he asked to release Lady Pan's elder sister [from the Weaving
Chamber] and marry her off, which Quan permitted. The
following year he established Lady Pan as empress.

Lady Pan was by nature wickedly jealous of other charmers.
From beginning to end, she slandered a great many, including
Lady Yuan and others.[L] When Sun Quan was not well, Lady Pan
sent someone to enquire of Prefect of the Palace Writers Sun Hong
the precedent of Empress Lü's assumption of power.[59] She was
exhausted from attending to Quan's illness and as a result became
emaciated. A number of courtiers, taking advantage of her being in
a deep sleep, strangled her and attributed her death to a sudden
illness.[60] Later, the matter leaked out and six or seven persons were


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sentenced to death. Quan died shortly thereafter, and they were
buried together at Jiang Tumulus. Sun Liang ascended the throne
and made Lady Pan's elder sister's son-in-law Tan Shao [OMITTED] chief
commandant of cavalry and gave him troops. When Liang was
deposed, Shao and his family returned to their home commandery
of Luling [OMITTED].[61]

[L]

50.1200
The Record of Wu says: Lady Yuan was the daughter of Yuan Shu. She
was unpretentious and had no children. On numerous occasions Quan
took the children of his concubines and gave them to her to raise, but
she alone did not bear any children. When Lady Bu died, Quan wished
to establish her. Because she had no children herself, Lady Yuan
adamantly declined and did not accept.[62]

Sun Liang's Lady Quan was Quan Shang's daughter. Her father's
paternal aunt Princess [Quan; i.e., Sun Luban] was fond of her,
and whenever she went in for an audience, Lady Quan would be
in her company.[63] When Lady Pan and her son were favored [by
Sun Quan], Princess Quan, as the result of a falling out with Sun
He's mother, advised Sun Quan to make [Lady Quan] wife to
Lady Pan's son Liang. Liang subsequently became successor to the
throne, and the lady was made empress. Quan Shang was made
colonel of the capital gates and appointed marquis of a capital
commune. He replaced Teng Yin as grand master of ceremonies
and general of the guards. He advanced to be appointed marquis
of Yongping [OMITTED] and to become intendant of the masters of
writing.[64] At the time, five members of the Quan family were
marquises who also controlled infantry and cavalry. Others were
gentlemen in attendance, chief commandants of the cavalry, and
imperial bodyguards and attendants. Not since the rise of Wu had
the honor and prosperity of any of the affinal families equaled
theirs.

When General-in-Chief Zhuge Dan [OMITTED] of Wei came to
surrender Shouchun, Quan Yi [OMITTED], Quan Duan [OMITTED], Quan Yi
[OMITTED], and Quan Yi [OMITTED] all took the opportunity to surrender to
Wei.[65] When Quan Xi's [OMITTED] plot leaked out and he was killed,
the entire Quan family went into decline.[66] And when Sun Lin
deposed Sun Liang and made him king of Guiji, and later, when
he was further demoted to marquis of Houguan [OMITTED], Lady Quan
accompanied him to his fief and dwelled at Houguan.[67] Quan
Shang moved his family to Lingling [OMITTED],[68] was pursued there,
and killed.[M]


130

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[M]

The Record of Wu says: Liang's wife was very sensitive and beautiful.
She dwelled at Houguan. When Wu was pacified [280], she returned.
She died during the Yongning [OMITTED] reign period [301-302].

Sun Xiu's Lady Zhu [OMITTED] was the daughter of Zhu Ju and was born
to Xiu's elder sister, the Princess Zhu [OMITTED] [Sun Luyu].[N] At the end
of the Chiwu period [238-251], Sun Quan brought her in to be
Xiu's consort. When Xiu became king of Langye, she accompanied
him to live at Danyang. During the Jianxing period [252-254],
Sun Jun [OMITTED] controlled the government, and the royal family
were all apprehensive about him. Quan Shang's wife was Jun's
elder sister, so only Princess Quan [Sun Luban] sided with him.[69]

[N]

I, Songzhi, presume that Xiu married his niece; this case is similar to
that of Emperor Hui of the Han. Since Xun Yue's [OMITTED] criticism was
entirely appropriate, I shall not expand on the matter further.[70]

Formerly, when Sun He was heir apparent, Princess Quan [Sun
Luban] slandered Lady Wang [Sun He's mother] and wanted to set
aside the heir apparent and establish the king of Lu, Sun Ba.[71]
Princess Zhu did not agree, and from that time they had a falling
out. During the Wufeng [OMITTED] reign period [254-256], Sun Yi [OMITTED]
plotted the murder of Sun Jun, but the affair was discovered and
he was executed.[72] Princess Quan took advantage of this to say
that Princess Zhu had been one of Yi's co-conspirators. Jun
unjustly killed Princess Zhu. Sun Xiu was frightened and sent Lady
Zhu back to Jianye. Clutching hands, they parted tearfully. When

50.1201
she arrived, Jun sent her back to Xiu. During the Taiping [OMITTED]
reign period [256-258], Sun Liang learned that Princess Zhu had
been brought to harm by Princess Quan, and he inquired into the
reasons behind Princess Zhu's death. Frightened, Princess Quan
replied, "I really don't know. Zhu Ju's two sons Xiong [OMITTED] and Sun
[OMITTED] know all about it."[73] Liang killed Xiong and Sun. Sun's wife
was Jun's younger sister.

Sun Lin increasingly hated Liang, and subsequently he deposed
Liang and installed Xiu.[74] In Yongan [OMITTED] 5 (262/263), he
established Lady Zhu as empress. When Xiu died, all the ministers
honored her as empress dowager. Sun Hao had been on the throne
a little more than a month when he demoted her to be Empress
Jing [OMITTED], referring to her as the Palace of Peace and Stability [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]. In the seventh month of Ganlu [OMITTED] 1 (July/August 265), she
was driven[75] to suicide and was buried with [Sun Xiu] at Ding
Tumulus (Dingling [OMITTED]).[O]


131

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[O]

The Record of Searching for Spirits says: Sun Jun murdered Princess
Zhu [Sun Luyu], and she was buried at Shizi gang [OMITTED]. When [the
Marquis] Guiming [OMITTED] [Sun Hao] acceded to the throne, he wanted
to rebury her.[76] The grave sites were adjoining and could not be
distinguished. But the palace rather well knew what the princess had
been wearing when she died. So they dispatched two shamans, one to
each grave site, to remain in a particular spot to watch for her spirit.
Inspectors were also sent to watch them so they could not come close
to each other. Sometime later, the shamans reported they had seen a
woman who could have been thirty or more. Her head was bound with
blue brocade, and she wore a purple- and white-lined garment and
vermilion slippers of silk and pongee. She came from the upper half of
the hill at Shizi gang. Placing her hands on her knees, she gave a long
and heavy sigh. Tarrying for a bit, she entered a small rest house atop
the grave, and after lingering there for some time, she suddenly
disappeared. The descriptions of the two shamans—without
collusion—were the same. Thereupon the grave was opened and the
clothing was as they had said.

Sun He's Dame He [OMITTED] had her home of record in Jurong [OMITTED] in
Danyang.[77] Her father Sui was originally a cavalryman. Sun Quan
once toured the various encampments, and she was watching him
en route. Quan saw her and was smitten by her. He ordered the
eunuchs to summon her into [the palace] and bestowed her on his
son He. When she gave birth to a son, Quan was overjoyed and
called him "Peng Zu" [OMITTED].[78] This was Sun Hao.

The heir apparent Sun He was set aside and later made king of
Nanyang, residing at Changsha. Sun Liang acceded to the throne,
and Sun Jun assisted in the government. Jun formerly had toadied
to Princess Quan, and when Princess Quan and Sun He's mother
had a falling out, she encouraged Jun to relocate He to Xindu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] and to send a messenger to bestow death. Sun He's principal
consort Zhang [OMITTED] also committed suicide.[79] Dame He said,
"If all are to follow in death, who will care for the orphans?"
Subsequently, she lovingly raised Hao and his three younger
brothers. When Hao acceded to the throne, he venerated Sun He
as the Illustrious and Worthy Emperor (Zhao xian huangdi [OMITTED]
[OMITTED])[P] and Dame He as the Illustrious and Worthy Empress, placing
her in the Palace of Ascendant Peace [OMITTED].[80] In a little over a
month he advanced her to be empress dowager. He appointed her
younger brothers Hong [OMITTED], Jiang [OMITTED], and Zhi [OMITTED] as marquises

50.1202
of Yongping, Liyang [OMITTED], and Xuancheng [OMITTED], respectively.[81]
When Hong died, his son Miao [OMITTED] succeeded him and was made

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inspector of the army at Wuling [OMITTED].[82] Miao was killed by the
Jin. Zhi held offices and attained the post of grand minister over
the masses.

In the chaos at the end of the Wu period, the He family became
arrogant and usurpatious, and the younger members of the family
were unconstrained and caused the people great distress. Thus
there arose a popular falsehood—"Hao is long dead. The one on
the throne is a scion of the He."[Q]

[P]

The Record of Wu says: Hao at first venerated He as the Illustrious and
Worthy Emperor but shortly thereafter changed the title to Civil
Emperor (Wen huangdi [OMITTED]).

[Q]

Biographies from beyond the Yangtze says: Hao considered Zhang Bu's
daughter to be a beauty and he favored her. Hao asked her, "Where is
your father?" She replied, "A bandit killed him."[83] Hao was infuriated
and clubbed her to death. Later, he thought of her countenance and
ordered a craftsman to carve a likeness of her beauty, which he always
kept at his side. He asked his attendants, "Didn't Bu have another
daughter?" They replied, "Bu's eldest daughter is married to Chun [OMITTED],
son of former Commandant of the Guards Feng Chao [OMITTED]."[84]
Forthwith, he seized Chun's wife and brought her into the palace,
where he greatly favored her and honored her with the position of
senior (zuo [OMITTED]) lady. Day and night he amused himself with her in the
apartments and ignored the affairs of state. He had the masters of
techniques make several thousand ornamental specula, "step-shaker"
hair ornaments,[85] and false braids. He ordered the courtiers to wrestle
fully dressed. Things that were completed in the morning were broken
by evening, and he would forthwith send out to have them made again.
The artisans took advantage of this to steal, and the storehouses and
treasuries became empty.

When the lady died, Hao grieved and pined for her. He buried her
in a park and constructed a great tomb. He had the artisans carve men
from cypress and place them in the tomb as sentries, and he used
immeasurable numbers of objects made of precious metals and stones.
After she had been interred, Hao observed mourning in the inner
apartments and did not go out for half a year. The people considered
the burial extremely extravagant, and everyone said that Hao had died
and that he was the one who had been buried.[86] Hao's maternal uncle
He Du [OMITTED] was very similar to Hao in appearance, and it was said
that Du had replaced him. The commandery administrator of Linhai
[OMITTED], Xi Xi [OMITTED], believed the falsehoods and raised troops to return
and execute Du. Du's paternal uncle Zhi at the time was inspector for


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naval defense (bei hai du [OMITTED]), and he attacked and killed Xi and
executed his family to three degrees.[87] The falsehoods ceased, but
people remained doubtful.

Sun Hao's Lady Teng was a third cousin of former Grand Master
of Ceremonies Teng Yin. When Yin's family was exterminated,
Lady Teng's father Mu was exiled to a frontier commandery
because he was a distant relative.[88] When Sun Xiu acceded to the
throne, there was a general amnesty and he was allowed to return.
Sun made Mu gentleman-of-the-household for all purposes. When
Hao was appointed marquis of Wucheng, he arranged to take
Mu's daughter in marriage as his consort. Once Hao had acceded
to the throne, he established her as empress, and he appointed Mu
marquis of Gaomi[89] and designated him general of the guards and
intendant of the masters of writing. Later, because Mu was a
venerated relative [i.e., had gained his position by virtue of his
daughter's position], the officers of the court frequently
remonstrated through him. Lady Teng gradually fell out of favor,
and Hao grew increasingly displeased, but Hao's mother Dame He
constantly supported her. Moreover, the grand astrologer said that
according to astrological operations the empress could not be
changed. Since Sun Hao believed in shamanesses and shamans, she
was able to avoid being dismissed and was permanently supported
in the Palace of Ascendant Peace. Mu was sent to live in Cangwu
[OMITTED] commandery, and though his noble rank was not taken
away, in fact he had been disgraced.[90] Subsequently, he died of
melancholy en route.

The officials of the Palace of Prolonged Autumn were simply
reserve officials. They received New Year's congratulatory messages
to the court, as in the past. But with regard to the various concubines
that Hao favored, many wore the seals and ribbons of an
empress at their waists. In Tianji 4 (280/281), they were moved to
Luoyang along with Hao.[R]

[R]

Biographies from beyond the Yangtze says: Hao further sent keepers of
the Yellow Gates[91] to travel throughout the provinces and commanderies
and to rank and select girls from the households of military and civil
officials. Those who were the offspring of ministers and officials with
ranks of two thousand bushels of grain should yearly state their names.
Those aged fifteen or sixteen were uniformly examined, and those who
did not pass the examination were permitted to marry. The women in


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the inner apartments numbered over a thousand, but still the selection
did not cease.[92]

The evaluation states: The Classic of Changes declares, "When
the family is put in order, the world will be in order."[93] The
Classic of Poetry says, "And his example acted on his wife,
extended to his brethren, and was felt by all the clans and
states."[94] How true, these words! When we look at Duke Huan
of Qi in the distant past[95] and examine Sun Quan more recently,
they possessed the brilliance of knowledgeable scholars and the
determination of heroes. But they did not distinguish between their
primary and secondary wives. The women's apartments were in
confusion, making them laughingstocks of history and bringing
misfortune to their descendants. If we evaluate the matter from this
point of view, only he who makes morality and righteousness his
frame of mind, and impartiality and consistency his primary
principle, can avoid these entanglements.

 
[1]

Sun Jian is thus referred to because he held the post of caitiff-smashing general
(po lu jiangjun [OMITTED]).

[2]

Wu, capital of Wu commandery, was near present-day Suzhou [OMITTED]. Qiantang,
also in Wu commandery, was near modern Hangzhou [OMITTED].

[3]

On buyu [OMITTED], translated as "unlucky" here, see Sgz jiaogu, 244. The motif
of the woman who sacrifices herself for the good of the family by marrying
a powerful but uncouth man is found elsewhere in Records of the Three States.
Lü Fan [OMITTED], a minor prefectural official, sought to marry a beautiful young
woman named Liu [OMITTED], who came from a very wealthy family. Her mother
was adamantly opposed, but the young woman replied that Lü did not look
like someone who would remain poor for long, and she married him.
Subsequently he became one of Sun Ce's most trusted supporters and rose to
grand minister of war under Sun Quan (Sgz, 56.1309-1311).

[4]

Sun Jian apparently had more than a single daughter, since Records of the Three
States
refers separately to three sisters of Sun Quan. One was the younger sister
whom Sun Quan married off to Liu Bei (see Fascicle 34, note 23 above). A
second was an elder sister married to one Hong Zi [OMITTED] of Qu'e [OMITTED], a man
who is otherwise virtually unknown (Sgz, 52.1231; Wu lu cited in Sgz,
48.1165). The daughter of another elder sister, surnamed Chen [OMITTED], was
married off by Sun Quan to Pan Mi [OMITTED], who was the son of Pan Jun [OMITTED]
[OMITTED], one of Quan's loyal and high-ranking officials; Pan Jun's daughter was
married to Sun Lu [OMITTED], Quan's second son (Wu shu cited in Sgz, 61.1399).
De Crespigny assumes that this last sister was actually a half sister born of
a mother surnamed Chen (de Crespigny, Generals of the South, 86 n. 18), but
Chen was the woman's married name (Sgz cidian, 467). Given that Lady Wu
bore but one daughter, two of the three must have been half sisters. De
Crespigny is probably correct in concluding that the youngest of the three was
Sun Quan's full sister. Chen Shou describes her as being like "all her brothers"
(Sgz, 37.960). The elder sisters were married to relative unknowns, while the
youngest was used by Sun in an effort to cement an alliance against the Wei.

[5]

See Gan, Sou shen ji, 122. The incident is found in a number of other works.
Unusual dreams presaging the birth of an important person are a common
motif in Chinese literature. See, for example, the accounts of the pregnancies
of Bo, mother of Emperor Wen, and Wang Zang'er [OMITTED], empress to
Emperor Jing and mother of Emperor Wu of the Han (Sj, 49.1971, 1975;
Watson, Records of the Grand Historian: Han Dynasty, 1:326, 330), and the
account of the birth of Sun Liang in the biography of Lady Pan later in this
fascicle. Sometimes such dreams could presage unhappy results. See Js, 9.242;
Lü, "Heaven's Mandate and Man's Destiny in Early Medieval China," 35.
Concerning Sun Jian's own birth, the Record of Collected Remnants offers the
following account:

When Sun's mother was pregnant, she dreamed that her intestines
came out and wrapped themselves about her waist. A virgin carried
her around outside the Chang Gate of Wu and gave her a stalk of
alang. The virgin spoke, "This is very propitious. You will certainly
bear a talented and heroic son. Today I bestow on the mother the
land whereby to be king over the alloted fields of the Yi and Zhen
houses of the zodiac. The empire will be divided into three parts.
Within a hundred years there will be a resonance and he will bestow
an extraordinary treasure [i.e., the seal of state] on others." She
finished speaking and Sun's mother awoke. In the morning she went
to have the meaning divined. The diviner said, "The dream about
the virgin carrying the mother around the Chang Gate: this is the
spirit of Taibai [Grand White, or Venus, the star that governs generals
and military affairs], whose influence has brought this dream. The
rise of an emperor or prince must have a divine sign." The
manifestation of a white aura is the color of metal. When Wu was
destroyed and Jin succeeded, it was the confirmation of the dream.

(Syj, 7.8a-b; cf. Foster, "The Shih-i chi and Its Relationship to the
Genre Known as Chih-kuai hsiao-shuo," 256)

This motif was not limited to the birth of great men. The Han History records
that when Madam Li was pregnant with Wang Zhengjun, she dreamed that


214

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the moon shone into her bosom. Wang Zhengjun went on to become empress
to Emperor Yuan and a major presence through the reigns of four emperors
(Hs, 98.4015). Earlier, when Wang Zhengjun's father, Wang Wengru [OMITTED], had
moved to the town of Yuancheng [OMITTED] in Wei commandery [OMITTED], someone
said,

In the past during the Spring and Autumn period, when Shalu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] mountain collapsed, a scribe of Jin divined the import and said,
"Yin is assuming the virility of yang, and Earth is succeeding Fire.
That is the reason Shalu collapsed. Six hundred forty-five years from
now, there should be a woman sage arising. . . . Now Wang Wengru
has moved here, and he has rectified the land, and the sun and moon
are in conjunction with it. East of the town of Yuancheng there is
Wulu [OMITTED] hill, which is the location of Shalu. Eighty years from now
there will be a noble woman who will make the empire flourish."

(Hs, 98.4014)
[6]

During the Later Han, this office could be a sinecure and the holder did not
necessarily command troops. See Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times,
29.

[7]

Danyang commandery lay along the southern bank of the Yangtze River,
extending roughly from just west of present-day Zhenjiang [OMITTED] westward to
modern Anqing [OMITTED]. It was an extremely important commandery and had
its capital at Jianye [OMITTED] (modern Nanjing [OMITTED]), the city that later became
the Wu capital.

[8]

Zhou Xin had been appointed administrator of Danyang commandery and
was an early supporter of Cao Cao in his battles with Yuan Shao. As
administrator of Danyang, he aided Cao in raising soldiers. Wu Jing attacked
Zhou on Yuan Shu's orders but failed to capture him. Wu summoned all the
peasants who had dared to follow Zhou and put them to death. Zhou
thereupon disbanded his army and returned to his home commandery (Sgz,
1.8; Xiandi chunqiu [OMITTED] [Spring and Autumn Annals of Emperor Xian],
quoted in Sgz, 51.1206, commentary).

Sun Ce was Wu Jing's nephew. Intensely disliked by Tao Qian [OMITTED],
shepherd of Xu [OMITTED] province, he took his mother and moved to Qu'e. With
Lü Fan and Sun He, he joined Wu Jing, then administrator of Danyang, and
raised several hundred soldiers (Sgz, 46.1101).

Sun He, who hailed from Wu, originally had the surname Wu. Being very
fond of him, Sun Ce bestowed the Sun surname on him and had him included
in the Sun household register (Sgz, 51.1214).

Lü Fan was a native of Ru'nan commandery, and during the turmoil at the
end of the Han he took refuge at Shouchun [OMITTED]. Sun Ce spotted him there
and was impressed by him. Lü joined Sun with a band of followers. He became
one of Sun's strongest supporters, and Sun treated him as a member of the
family (Sgz, 56.1309).

[9]

Zu Lang was the leader of a clan militia (zong shuai [OMITTED]) in Danyang
commandery. According to one account, Yuan Shu, who deeply disliked Sun
Ce, sent an agent to present Zu with a seal and to encourage him to stir up
hill bandits and attack Sun. Sun learned of the plot and personally led an attack
on Zu, managing to capture him alive. Sun told him that although Zu had
previously attacked him and cut his saddle, now he was building an army and


215

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wished to put aside grudges. Zu kowtowed and apologized for his crime. Sun
appointed Zu to his Bureau of Banditry (Menxia zeicao [OMITTED]; Sgz,
51.1211, Pei quoting Jiang biao zhuan [OMITTED] [Biographies from beyond the
Yangtze]). A variation of this story says that it was Chen Yu [OMITTED], administrator
of Wu commandery and general pacifying the East, who planned
to attack Sun Ce and sent an agent to present seals to Zu Lang and some other
local strongmen (Jiang biao zhuan, quoted in Sgz, 46.1107, commentary).

[10]

Liu Yao was appointed inspector of Yang province by the Han emperor. When
Yuan Shu rebelled, Liu sought to crush Yuan and his followers, including Wu
Jing. He was unsuccessful, and Yuan appointed his own inspector of Yang
province (Sgz, 49.1183-1184).

[11]

Hengjiang was on the northern bank of the Yangtze, about midway between
Dangtu [OMITTED] and Ma'an shan [OMITTED], near modern Ma'an shan southwest
of Nanjing. Fan Neng and Yu Mi were subordinates of Liu Yao.

[12]

Moling, located at modern Nanjing, had its name changed to Jianye by Sun
Quan in Jian'an 17 (212/213) and became the Wu capital. Ze Rong, a man
of questionable reliability, was administrator of Xiapei and attached himself
to Liu Yao. When Liu's troops were defeated by Yuan's followers, Ze turned
on Liu but was defeated by him and fled into the mountains, where he was
killed by the inhabitants (Sgz, 49.1184; 1185; 46.1103, Pei quoting Jiang biao
zhuan
). Xue Li was administrator of Pengcheng [OMITTED], and like Ze, he became
one of Liu's followers. He was killed by Ze, apparently in error. See Sgz,
46.1103, 49.1185.

[13]

Niuzhu was across the Yangtze from Hengjiang.

[14]

Yuzhang commandery was in modern northwestern Jiangxi province and had
its capital near modern Nanchang [OMITTED].

[15]

Shouchun, near Shouxian [OMITTED], Anhui on the Huai River, was an area of great
strategic significance because of its location on the main route from the Central
Plain to the South and because it was a very productive agricultural area.

[16]

Liu Bei had just assumed control of Xu province, thereby denying it to Yuan
Shu. Yuan attacked Liu, but Liu managed to stop him (Sgz, 32.873).

[17]

This was in 197. Yuan's support quickly dissipated, and his army met with
a series of reverses. He died a couple of years later, after trying to turn his
imperial title over to his brother, Yuan Shao. See Sgz, 6.209-210, and Chen,
Hsün Yüeh, 52-54.

[18]

In the summer of Jian'an 2 (197), the Han dispatched Wang Pu with a decree
praising Sun Ce and appointing him chief commandant of the cavalry, granting
him the hereditary title of marquis of Wucheng [OMITTED] (the seat of Wuxing
commandery), and concomitantly making him administrator of Guiji. Ce
considered the position of chief commandant beneath him because he
commanded both infantry and cavalry. He sent someone to ridicule Wang, who
had happened to receive a command bestowing on Ce the title of general who
makes brilliant the Han (ming Han jiangjun [OMITTED]; Sgz, 46.1107, Pei
quoting Jiang biao zhuan).

[19]

Zhang Zhao had been a trusted follower of Sun Ce. On his deathbed, Sun
Ce entrusted the young Sun Quan to Zhang's guidance and told Zhang that
if Quan failed to fulfill his duties, Zhang should remove him (Sgz, 52.1220;
Wu li [OMITTED] [Progress of Wu], quoted in Sgz, 52.1221, commentary).

[20]

Gao Tumulus lay west of Danyang in modern Jiangsu province.

[21]

Wei Teng was noted for being firm and upright and eschewing improper
conduct. He was apparently well respected, for once, when he seriously
offended Sun Quan, Wu Fan [OMITTED], himself noted for his uprightness, risked
death to intercede on Wei's behalf (Sgz, 63.1422-1423; Guiji dianlu, quoted
in Sgz, 63.1423, commentary).

[22]

Cf. Jksl(a), 1.9.

[23]

The Jiankang shi lu [OMITTED] [True Record of Jiankang] also gives Jian'an
12 as the year of Lady Wu's death (Jksl[a], 1.9). Liang Zhangju [OMITTED] (1775-1849)
agrees and says the erroneous Jian'an 7 date derives from the subsequent
line, which states that Wu Jing died in Jian'an 8 (Sgz pangzheng, 28.6b).
Presumably Liang thought that a later copyist had "corrected" Jian'an 12 to
Jian'an 7. Since the True Record of Jiankang is a Tang text, it may simply
have been following the Forest of Resolve, which was written in the fourth
century and is known to have been consulted by the work's author. Sun Quan's
biography also gives the date as Jian'an 7 (Sgz, 7.1116). Cf. Sgz jijie, 50.2b-3a.
The True Record of Jiankang contains the following about Lady Wu:

Jian'an 12. Grand Lady Wu passed away. She was buried together
[with Sun Jian] at Gao Tumulus. Her home of record was Qiantang
in Wu commandery. Losing her mother and father early, she lived
with her younger brother Jing. Sun Jian learned of her talent and
beauty, and he sought after and married her. The lady was first
pregnant with Sun Ce, and she dreamed that the moon entered her
bosom. When she was pregnant with Sun Quan, she dreamed that
the sun entered her bosom, and she told Jian. Jian said, "The sun
and moon are the essence of yin and yang. This is a sign of extreme
nobility. May my sons and grandsons flourish!" Later Jian died, and
the lady made her home at Shu [OMITTED]. She cared for and raised the
orphaned and young, and she was severe in her maternal instruction.
When Ce took charge of the masses, the lady aided in directing
military and state affairs, and she was a great help.

(Jksl[a], 1.9)

Shu prefecture was in modern Anhui not far from Lujiang. Note that in the
last sentence, where the text says she was of great help to Sun Ce, in Sgz it
is Sun Quan.

[24]

It was common under the Wu for sons to inherit command of their fathers'
troops. When the son was a minor, it was recognized that he would assume
command upon attaining majority. See He, "Sun Wu bing zhi."

[25]

Sun Ba was Sun Quan's fourth son. Ba and Quan's third son, He [OMITTED], were
very close and treated each other as equals, though He was the heir apparent.
This elicited considerable criticism from those who considered it a violation
of etiquette. When Sun Quan heard of this, he prohibited the two from seeing
each other. Later, when Sun Quan fell ill and was bedridden, Sun He went
to offer sacrifices in the ancestral temple. Zhang Xiu [OMITTED], uncle of Sun He's
concubine, lived near the temple and invited He to stay with him. Princess
Quan [OMITTED] sent someone to spy on him, and she reported that Sun He was
not in the temple but was plotting with his concubine's family. She also said
that He's mother, Lady Wang, had looked happy when Sun Quan became ill.
Sun Quan became angry, causing He's mother to "die of anguish." Sun He
lost favor, and Sun Ba began to covet the position of heir apparent. Although


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several officials pointed out that this would violate precedence, others formed
a faction around Sun Ba and the recriminations grew. Sun He was set aside
and replaced by Sun Liang, Sun Quan's youngest son. Sun He was made king
of Nanyang [OMITTED] and exiled to Changsha [OMITTED]. Ba was permitted to commit
suicide, and the members of his faction were executed (Sgz, 47.1148, 59.13691372;
Yin Ji [OMITTED], Tong yu [OMITTED] [Comprehensive Discourses], quoted in Sgz,
59.1369-1370 commentary).

[26]

See Fascicle 5, note 30. See also Sgz cidian, 398.

[27]

Teng Yin's uncle and father had served under Sun Quan and both had died
early. Because of his regard for them, Sun appointed Teng Yin to a commune
marquisate. Subsequently, Teng became administrator of Danyang. When Sun
Quan died, he was made one of the regents with Zhuge Ke [OMITTED]. Teng
became involved in a factional struggle with Sun Lin [OMITTED], which he lost, and
he and his family were executed (Sgz, 48.1153; 64.1443-1444).

[28]

Wuling commandery straddled the borders of present-day Hunan, Guizhou,
and Sichuan and had its capital near Changde [OMITTED].

[29]

Xie Cheng's work now exists only in fragments first collected by Wang Wentai
[OMITTED] in Qijia Hou Han shu [OMITTED] (1882). Now see Zhou, Ba jia Hou
Han shu ji zhu,
1:1-284.

[30]

Jianchang was in Yuzhang commandery, west of present-day Nanchang.

[31]

Lady Xu's biography is excerpted in Fang, The Chronicles of the Three
Kingdoms,
1:600.

[32]

Danglikou was downstream from Hengjiang. Like Fan Neng and Yu Mi (see
Fascicle 50.1195 above), Zhang Ying was a subordinate of Liu Yao. At
the time, Yuan Shu was active in Huainan and was plotting rebellion. Liu
sent Fan, Yu, and Zhang to bivouac along the Yangtze to block him. Yuan
thereupon set up a puppet inspector of Yang province and combined forces
with Wu Jing and Sun Ben to attack them. For over a year Fan and the others
held out, and it was not until Sun Ce crossed the Yangtze and attacked them
that they were defeated and Liu Yao had to flee (Sgz, 46.1102; 48.1184).

[33]

Zhou jia [OMITTED], which we have translated as "senior provincial officials," must
refer to Liu Yao and his subordinates. See Sgz jijie, 50.4a.

[34]

Li Shu, who was from Ru'nan, was appointed administrator of Lujiang
commandery (in modern Anhui just north of Anqing) in Jian'an 5 (200/201).
Following Ce's death, Li was unwilling to serve Sun Quan, and he took in
many of those who had rebelled against Quan. When Quan wrote to ask the
reason, Li replied, "Those with virtue have people submit to them, while those
without virtue experience rebellion. I shall not submit." Quan was incensed
and sent a report to Cao Cao in which he was extremely critical of Li. He
attacked Li at Wan [OMITTED] (northeast of modern Anqing). Li fortified the city and
defended himself, seeking assistance from Cao Cao. Cao, however, did not
respond. When the supplies of grain in the city were exhausted, some of the
women made pellets from mud and ingested these. In the end, Quan was
victorious, and he slaughtered those in the city, displayed Li's decapitated head,
and exiled over thirty thousand of his personal troops (buqu [OMITTED]; see Sgz,
10.312; 46.1108; 47.1116, Pei quoting Jiang biao zhuan; 51.1214, Pei quoting
Wu shu).

[35]

Huang Zu served under Liu Biao in the fighting with the Sun family. In 193.
Sun Jian was killed by Huang's troops in an ambush. Huang in turn was killed


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by Sun Quan in Jian'an 13 (208/209; see HHs, 74.2423; Sgz, 46.1100,
47.1117; Dian lüe [OMITTED] [Institutional Epitome], quoted in Sgz, 46.110011011,
commentary). It was in this last campaign that Kun was killed. Huang
Zu is also known to history as the man who ordered the death of Mi Heng
[OMITTED] (ca. 173-198), the audacious young wit best known for goading Cao
Cao and as the author of "Yingwu fu" [OMITTED] [Rhapsody on a Parrot]. See
HHs, 80B.2657-2658. See also Graham, "Mi Heng's Rhapsody on a Parrot"
and Cutter, "Mi Heng."

[36]

The reconstruction is based on Ting, Chinese Phonology of the Wei-Chin
Period.
Cf. Coblin, A Handbook of Eastern Han Sound Glosses, 101, 162.

[37]

Sun Quan was appointed king of Wu in the second month of Huangchu 18
(September/October 221) by Cao Pi (Emperor Wen of the Wei), and Deng
was made his heir apparent. Then in Huanglong [OMITTED] 1 (229, a Wu reign date),
Quan declared himself emperor and made Deng heir apparent to the imperial
throne (Sgz, 2.78, 47.1121-1123, 48.1133-1135).

[38]

Sgz, 59.1365 has the following:

Deng was born of a base mother. Lady Xu deserved his gratitude for
having raised him as though she were his mother when he was young.
Later, when Lady Xu was abandoned in Wu because of jealousy, Lady
Bu was favored most. Whenever Lady Bu gave him something, [Deng]
dared not refuse but simply accepted it respectfully. A messenger came
from Lady Xu and told him that any clothing that he might be given
he must wash before wearing. When Deng was made heir apparent,
he declined, saying, " `When the foundation is established, the Way
is born.' If you wish to install an heir apparent, you must first establish
the empress." Quan enquired, "Where is your mother?" "In Wu."
Quan was silent.

(cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms,
1:600-601)

In this exchange, Deng employs an allusion to the Conversations: "Master You
said, `It is rare that there is someone who is filial toward his parents and
fraternal toward his brothers but disposed to be disobedient toward his ruler.
And never has there been a person ill-disposed to disobey his ruler who was
disposed to rebellion. The gentleman devotes himself to the foundation. When
the foundation is established, the Way is born. Filial piety and fraternal feeling
are the foundation of benevolence' " (Lun yu, 1.2).

[39]

Linhuai commandery was in modern Anhui, north of the Yangtze, during the
Former Han. During the Later Han, this commandery became the kingdom
of Xiapei. The use of Linhuai here and in Sgz, 52.1236 seems to be
anachronistic. Cf. Sgz jijie, 52.29a. Another translation of the entry on Lady
Bu can be pieced together from Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms,
1:601-602, 690.

[40]

Bu Zhi was one of Sun Quan's closest supporters. He was made chancellor
in Chiwu [OMITTED] 9 (246/247; see Sgz, 52.1240).

[41]

Zhou Xun was a commandant of the cavalry and died young. Quan Cong
was one of Sun Quan's closest and brightest military commanders. His father
had been commandant of the Eastern Region of Guiji (Guiji dongbu jiangjun
[OMITTED]) and was the first to submit to Sun Ce when Sun took Wu
(Sgz, 60.1381-1382). Quan Cong's biography states, "In Huanglong 1, Quan


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was promoted to be general of the guards, left commissioner over the army
(zuo hu jun [OMITTED]), and shepherd of Xu province. He married a princess"
(Sgz, 60.1382; cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 1:690).

[42]

Zhu Ju was appointed to office by Sun Quan because he combined literary
and martial talent. During the struggle between Lady Wang and Princess Quan,
he sided with Sun He. Sun Hong [OMITTED] slandered him and, taking advantage
of Sun Quan's illness, had a decree fabricated and sent to Zhu ordering him
to commit suicide (Sgz, 57.1340).

[43]

Sgz, 47.1142 says, under Chiwu 1, "Lady Bu died. She was posthumously
granted the title of empress." Cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms,
1:600.

[44]

Gu Yong was one of Quan's most trusted officials; he served as chancellor for
nineteen years. Characteristically, he did not say much, so that when he did
speak, Quan attached great weight to his words. He also did not drink, and
during banquets and celebrations those about Quan were afraid that if they
drank too much and lost control, Gu would see them. This prompted Sun Quan
to comment, "When Duke Gu is present, people are unable to enjoy
themselves" (Sgz, 52.1225-1228).

[45]

The Jiankang shi lu says: "In the second month [of Chiwu 1 (March 238),
Sun Quan] posthumously made Lady Bu empress. The empress's taboo name
was Lianshi [OMITTED], and her home of record was Huaiyin prefecture in Linhuai
commandery. She accompanied her mother to Lujiang. Lujiang was overrun
by King Huan [OMITTED] [Sun Ce], so they crossed to south [of the Yangtze]. Because
of her beauty she obtained the emperor's favor and bore two daughters, Luban
and Luyu. By nature she was not jealous and she often advanced others. As
a result she was long beloved and he made her the favorite of the rear
apartments. When the emperor acceded to the throne, on numerous occasions
he wanted to establish her as empress, but his senior ministers had their minds
set on the mother of the heir apparent, Madam Xu. So the emperor had no
choice but to put it off for more than ten years. She passed away, and he
mourned her. It was in this year that he posthumously made her empress. Later
they were buried together at Jiang Tumulus" (Jksl[a], 2.32-33). Sun Quan
was also buried at Jiang Tumulus, as were Lady Pan (see below) and Quan's
eldest son Sun Deng.

[46]

For another translation of this paragraph, see Fang, The Chronicles of the
Three Kingdoms,
1:690-691.

[47]

The Huangwu reign title was actually adopted in the tenth month of the year
(November/December 222), and was changed to Huanglong in the fourth
month of the year (May/June 229). The biography of the unfortunate Sun
He appears in Sgz, 59.1367-1371.

[48]

Sun He's biography says: "After this, Lady Wang and Princess Quan harbored
ill feelings toward each other. Sun Quan was bedridden with illness, and Sun
He offered sacrifices at the temple. Zhang Xiu, the younger paternal uncle of
He's concubine, dwelled near the temple, and he invited He to stay with him.
Princess Quan sent someone to spy. Consequently, she said that the heir
apparent was not in the temple but had gone solely to plot with the concubine's
family. She further said that when Lady Wang had seen the emperor in bed,
she had looked happy. Sun Quan was furious about this. The lady died of
anxiety, while Sun He's favor declined, and he feared demotion and dismissal"
(Sgz, 59.1369; cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 1:683-684,


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690). Zztj 74.2362 says that Sun Quan sent Sun He to the Temple of King
Huan of Changsha (Changsha Huan wang miao [OMITTED]). King Huan
of Changsha is the posthumous title bestowed on Sun Ce by Sun Quan when
he assumed the imperial title in 229 (Sgz, 47.1134).

[49]

Hao ascended the throne in 264, and despite the display of filial piety at the
beginning of his reign, he proved an arrogant and cruel ruler.

[50]

Nothing else is known about Lady Wang's father, and there is nothing to
suggest that he may have been one of the Langye Wangs who were to become
so prominent in the South during a somewhat later period.

[51]

The reign title was changed to Chiwu in the ninth month of the latter year
(August/September 238).

[52]

Sun Xiu was born in 235 or 236. He acceded to the throne in 258, when Sun
Liang was set aside. Xiu's reign was somewhat rocky, and there were attempts
to topple him. He died in 265 at the age of thirty (Sgz, 48.1155-1163).

[53]

Gongan was a remote town of some strategic importance on the Yangtze in
Jing Province, not far from the city of the same name in present-day southern
Hunan.

[54]

The location of Jing Tumulus is unknown.

[55]

Cf. Zztj, 75.2385-2387; Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 2:114.
Juzhang was near present-day Ningbo [OMITTED].

[56]

The Weaving Chamber was within the palace and supplied woven goods for
imperial needs, including the imperial ancestral temple (Hs, 27A. 1330-1331).
The Qin created an Eastern Weaving Chamber and a Western Weaving
Chamber. In 28 B.C., the Former Han abolished the Eastern Weaving Chamber
and called the Western Weaving Chamber simply the Weaving Chamber (Hs,
19A.732). Women could be sent to the Weaving Chamber as a form of
punishment. For example, Bo Ji [OMITTED] (Dame Bo), a member of the harem of
Wei Bao [OMITTED], king of Wei [OMITTED], was sent to the Weaving Chamber following
Bao's capture by Cao Shen [OMITTED] during the fighting that attended the fall of
the Qin and the rise of the Han. She was discovered by the then king of Han,
Liu Bang, who had her transferred to the Inner Palace, where she was
eventually favored and became the mother of the future Emperor Wen (Hs,
4.105, 97A.3941).

Lady Pan was sent to the Weaving Chamber because of her father's crime,
and her discovery there is described here in terms similar to those used to
describe the fate of Bo Ji. Wang Jia's Record of Collected Remnants contains
a somewhat embellished description of this incident:

The father of Lady Pan, wife of the Sovereign of Wu, had been
convicted, and she had been brought to the Weaving Chamber. Her
appearance was uncommon, and in the region east of the Yangtze
her beauty was unsurpassed. More than a hundred of those who were
confined with her referred to the lady as a goddess. They showed
her respect and maintained their distance from her. Some officers
reported this to the lord of Wu, who ordered that a portrait be drawn
of her. The consort was melancholy and would not eat. She grew thin,
altering her appearance. The artist drew her as she was and submitted
it. The Sovereign of Wu saw it and was pleased. Rubbing an agate
scepter (ruyi [OMITTED]) until it broke, he sighed, "This is a goddess! If
a sorrowful appearance can so move men, how more so if she were


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happy!" He ordered an engraved carriage to go to the Weaving
Chamber to take her to the rear palace. In the end, because of her
ability she was favored.

Whenever he took the lady strolling through the Terrace of Brilliant
Proclamation, he was happy and content. When they were completely
intoxicated, she would spit into a jade vase. She would have the
serving girls pour this on the ground beneath the terrace and it would
burn.

She hung all her rings on a pomegranate branch, so [the Sovereign
of Wu] had built on that spot a terrace, which he named the Ringed
Pomegranate Terrace (Huanliu tai [OMITTED]). At the time there were
remonstrators who said, "Now Wu and Shu are struggling for
supremacy. The name `huan Liu' will become an omen!" Sun Quan
then reversed the name to "Pomegranate Ring Terrace" (Liuhuan tai).

Another time he went strolling with the consort at the Angling
Terrace (Diao tai [OMITTED]) and caught a large fish. The sovereign of Wu
was greatly pleased. Lady Pan said, "In the past I have heard of `crying
over a fish.' Now it makes you happy. If there is happiness, certainly
it will make the sadness deeper."

In later years, others slandered her, and they gradually withdrew
from her. People at the time said of the consort, "Her understanding
of portents is divine." The sovereign of Wu presently ended the feasts,
and the consort was finally sent away.

(Syj, 8.3b-4a; cf. Foster, "The
Shih-i chi and Its Relationship to the Genre Known as Chih-kuai
hsiao-shuo,
" 258-259)

This account is obviously fictionalized. It does not agree with the account of
the relationship between Sun Quan and Lady Pan in Records of the Three
States,
and Lu Bi has pointed out its unreliability (Sgz jijie, 50.7b). The anecdote
about the Ringed Pomegranate Terrace involves a pun. Liu [OMITTED] was the surname
of the ruling family of the Han dynasty, of which the ruler of Shu, Liu Bei,
was a distant member (the putative descendant of one of the sons of Emperor
Jing of the Former Han [r. 156-141 B.C.]). Huan liu (ringed pomegranate) is
nearly homophonous with "huan Liu" [OMITTED] ("bring back the Liu").

"Crying over a fish" is a reference to a story in the Zhan guo ce [OMITTED]
[Intrigues of the Warring States]: The king of Wei was fishing with his lover,
the Lord of Longyang (Longyang jun [OMITTED]). When the Lord of Longyang
had caught ten or more fish, tears began streaming down his cheeks. The king
asked why he was crying. The lord replied that when he had caught the first
fish, he had been extremely happy. But then he caught others that were even
larger, and he wanted to get rid of those he had caught earlier. This made him
think: If he displeased the king, the king would no longer sleep with him. There
were lots of pretty boys in the world, and when they heard that he had been
favored by the king, they too would pick up their skirts and come running.
The Lord of Longyang compared himself to the first fish, saying that he too
would be abandoned, so he could not help but cry (Zhan guo ce, 25.917; cf.
Hinsch, Passions of the Cut Sleeve, 32-33). It is interesting that in Wang Jia's
story Madam Pan sees nothing amiss in comparing her situation with that of
the homosexual lover of an ancient ruler. By this time Lord Longyang was
already an "icon" of homosexual love (Hinsch, Passions of the Cut Sleeve,
71).


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"Her understanding of portents is divine" is an allusion to the Classic of
Changes:

The Master said: "To know the seeds [i.e., the portents], that is divine
indeed. In his association with those above him, the superior man
does not flatter. In his association with those beneath him, he is not
arrogant. For he knows the seeds. The seeds are the first imperceptible
beginning of movement, the first trace of good fortune (or misfortune)
that shows itself. The superior man perceives the seeds and
immediately takes action. He does not wait even a whole day."

(Wilhelm, I Ching, 342)

Lady Pan is being credited with having foreseen her fate.

[57]

The dragon is, of course, a symbol of imperial rule.

[58]

Sun Liang replaced Sun He, who was set aside.

[59]

From Guiji, Sun Hong apparently was unrelated to the ruling family. He was
instrumental in eliminating some of Sun He's supporters through false decrees
that he was able to issue because of Quan's illness. He was appointed junior
tutor of the heir apparent (taizi shaofu [OMITTED]) by the dying Sun Quan.
Hong was on poor terms with Zhuge Ke, whom Quan had appointed grand
tutor (taizi dafu [OMITTED]) to the heir apparent and made regent to Sun Liang.
Sun Hong arranged to be notified the moment Quan expired so that he could
issue a forged decree eliminating Zhuge Ke. Ke learned of this, interrogated
Hong, and had him executed (Sgz, 52.1225, 57.1340, 59.1369, 1370, 61.1402,
64.1433, 1434).

[60]

Sima Guang [OMITTED] (1019-1086) says that Lady Pan was killed by her
attendants, who could not bear her tyrannical manner. Hu Sanxing [OMITTED]
(1230-1287), however, thinks this ludicrous. He writes that such people would
have encouraged her for their own benefit and believes that it was high-ranking
officials who did her in. Hu suggests that Sima Guang was misled by
embellished histories of Wu. See Zztj, 75.2394-2395; Fang, The Chronicles
of the Three Kingdoms,
2:104, 114.

[61]

Luling was in southeastern Jiangxi province near Ji'an [OMITTED] city. The account
in the True Record of Jiankang says,

[Taiyuan [OMITTED] 1], fifth month [June/July 251], Madam Pan was
established as empress. . . . [Taiyuan 2], second month [February/
March 253], a great amnesty was granted throughout the empire,
and the year was changed to Shenfeng [OMITTED] 1. Empress Pan died
violently in the inner halls.

The empress was respectful and virtuous, and she had her home
of record in Juzhang in Guiji commandery. She was summoned into
the palace from the Weaving Room and obtained favor. She often
said she dreamed that she was presented with a dragon's head and
that she received it with an apron. Subsequently she bore the Young
Emperor. The empress by nature was secretly jealous and was skilled
at charm. From beginning to end, she slandered without cease. When
she became ill, the people of the palace attended to her illness and
could not bear the fatigue. Taking advantage of her being in a deep
sleep, they together strangled her and said she died of a sudden illness.


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There was an investigation and the matter leaked. Six or seven
persons were sentenced to death.

(Jksl[a], 2.45)

The accounts in the Records of the Three States and the True Record of Jiankang
diverge significantly, and it is likely the latter is corrupt. Cf. Jksl (b), 2.68
nn. 67 and 68.

[62]

The connections between the Suns and the Yuan family, whose members had
held high office since the reign of Emperor Zhang, were close. Sun Jian had
commanded an army under Yuan Shu in the wars against Dong Zhuo and
Liu Biao. Following Sun Jian's death, his nephew Sun Ben took command of
his troops and was appointed inspector of Yu province by Yuan Shu. A couple
of years later, Sun Jian's son Sun Ce entered Yuan Shu's service and took
command of his father's troops, Sun Ben having returned south. Relations
between Sun Ce and Yuan Shu do not appear to have been particularly warm,
and in 197, when Yuan Shu declared himself emperor of the Zhong [OMITTED] dynasty,
Sun Ce broke with him. Yuan found himself opposed from all sides, and when
he died in 199, his power had been greatly reduced. His wife and children
took refuge with Liu Xun [OMITTED], administrator of Lujiang commandery and
a former official under Yuan. Sun Ce defeated Liu Xun, and Yuan Shu's
daughter was taken into Sun Quan's harem. Yuan's son Yuan Yao [OMITTED] was
made gentleman-of-the-palace, and his daughter was wed to Sun Quan's son
Sun Fen [OMITTED] (HHs, 75.2439-2444; Sgz 6.207-210; de Crespigny, Generals of
the South,
146-180, 189).

Since Sun Quan did not attempt to make Lady Yuan principal wife until
after the death of Lady Bu in 238, Lady Yuan must have been at least forty
years of age and may have been much older. Sun's desire to elevate her to
principal wife may have been motivated by a desire to bring order to his harem,
and her reasons for declining—aside from the fact that she had no children—
may have stemmed from a desire to remain aloof from harem machinations.
She may have understood the impact of such machinations. In his commentary,
Pei Songzhi includes the following excerpt from the Jiu zhou chunqiu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] [Spring and Autumn Annals of the Nine Provinces]:

The daughter of Director of Retainers (sili [OMITTED]) Feng Fang [OMITTED]
was a beauty of the empire. She took refuge in Yang province from
the disorder. Yuan Shu ascended the city wall, where he saw and was
smitten with her. Presently, he took her into his harem and was
extremely fond of her. The other wives were jealous of the favor
shown her and told her, "The general esteems those who have
aspirations and integrity. You should frequently weep and be
melancholy. Then you will surely be long honored." Madam Feng
believed them, and afterward, when she saw Yuan Shu, she let her
tears fall. Yuan Shu took this as a sign of her will, and he increasingly
pitied her. The other wives then strangled her and hung her from the
roof beam of the privy. Yuan Shu truly believed that she had died
because she was unable to achieve her aspirations, so he gave her
an elaborate funeral.

(Sgz, 6.210)
[63]

Sun Liang's biography offers the following background: "Sun Quan was
advanced in years, and Liang being his youngest son, Sun was especially


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attentive to him. Liang's older sister Princess Quan had slandered the heir
apparent Sun He and his mother and was apprehensive. So she took advantage
of Sun Quan's inclinations to secure her position in advance and repeatedly
praised Quan Shang's daughter, urging that she be wed to Sun Liang. In Chiwu
13 [250], Sun He was deposed, and Sun Quan appointed Liang heir apparent,
with Lady Quan as his consort" (Sgz, 48.1151; cf. Fang, The Chronicles of
the Three Kingdoms,
2:74). Quan Shang was a nephew of Quan Cong, Princess
Quan's husband.

[64]

Yongping was southwest of the capital near present-day Yixing [OMITTED].

[65]

Zhuge Dan was commander of the Wei garrison at Shouchun. In 257, he
rebelled and tried to surrender the garrison to Wu. Several members of the
Quan family, led by Quan Yi [OMITTED], were sent to assist Zhuge Dan. Two members
of the family, Quan Hui [OMITTED] and Quan Yi [OMITTED], remained in the capital at Jianye,
and because of the conflict and suits within the family, they took their mother
and several tens of families of their personal retainers, crossed the Yangtze,
and surrendered to the Wei general Sima Zhao. At the suggestion of his
advisers, Sima Zhao had Quan Hui and Quan Yi [OMITTED] write a letter to Quan
Yi [OMITTED] stating that Wu was angry with Yi [OMITTED] for being unable to take Shouchun
and planned to execute his entire family. They had, therefore, fled for their
lives. Quan Yi [OMITTED] and his followers were frightened into submitting to Sima
Zhao. They were all richly rewarded, which caused discord among the Wei
rebels, who subsequently also surrendered (Sgz, 28.786-787, 48.1154-1155,
64.1447; Js, 2.33-35; Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 2:285-286).

[66]

Nothing more is known about this plot.

[67]

Houguan was at present-day Fuzhou [OMITTED].

[68]

Lingling commandery was in present-day southwestern Hunan, in the region
now covered by Lingling county. The Quans were involved in a plot to
eliminate Sun Lin, whose arrogance and usurpation of authority had angered
Sun Liang. Sun Liang ordered Quan Ji [OMITTED] to kill Sun Lin. Quan Ji discussed
the plot with Quan Shang, who unthinkingly mentioned it to Quan Ji's mother.
She informed Sun Lin (another version says Lin was informed by a niece who
was one of Liang's concubines), who struck at the plotters, defeated them, and
then deposed Sun Liang. Quan Ji committed suicide (Sgz, 64.1448, and Pei
quoting Jiangbiao zhuan). See also Zztj, 77.2445-2447; Fang, The Chronicles
of the Three Kingdoms,
2:295-297.

[69]

Sun Jun was the great grandson of Sun Jian's younger brother Jing [OMITTED]. He
apparently had an affair with Sun Luban, Sun Luyu's elder sister and his own
lineage member. Following the death of Sun Quan, he became one of the
regents and was responsible for the death of Zhuge Ke. A number of people
tried unsuccessfully to eliminate him (Sgz, 64.1444-1445; cf. Fang, The
Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms,
2:313-314).

[70]

Emperor Hui married the daughter of his eldest sister (Hs, 97A.3940; Ch'ü,
Han Social Structure, 263-264). In commenting on Emperor Hui's marriage,
Xun Yue (148-209) wrote:

The match between husband and wife is a major relationship of the
way of humankind. The [Classic of] Poetry says, "His example
influenced his wife, extended to his brothers, and thereby exercised


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control over his family and the state." The Changes says, "When the
family is put in order, the world will all be in order." To make one's
sister's child a queen brings confusion to propriety and defilement to
human emotion. It is not the way to show the entire world the
principles of being people. None of the ministers dared to criticize
[the emperor's] faults.

(Hj, 5.4b)
[71]

Although Sun He and Sun Ba were on excellent terms and treated each other
as equals, parties grew up supporting one or the other for heir apparent. The
result was a bitter factionalism that threatened to divide the state. It was to
avoid such a disaster that Sun Quan changed the succession (Sgz, 59.13691370,
Pei quoting Tong yu).

[72]

This occurred in the autumn of 255. The conspirators included Sun Yi, Zhang
Yi [OMITTED], and Lin Xun [OMITTED]. Several versions say that when the plot was
discovered, Sun Yi committed suicide and the others confessed. A large number
("several tens") of conspirators lost their lives (Sgz, 48.1152, 52.1208,
64.1444-1445; Zztj, 76.2426).

[73]

Zhu Xiong and Zhu Sun were the sons of Zhu Ju, who was a follower of
Sun Quan and remained a supporter of Sun He against Sun Liang. When Sun
Quan was ill, Sun Hong fabricated a decree ordering Zhu to kill himself.
Princess Quan's accusation was false, though this was discovered too late.
Xiong and Sun were posthumously recognized for their meritorious service,
and Xiong's son succeeded his father as marquis of Yunyang [OMITTED] (Sgz,
57.1340).

[74]

Sun Jun died in 256, when he was thirty-eight, and Sun Lin came to dominate
the court in much the same way Jun had. When Sun Xiu overthrew Sun Lin
and asserted his authority, he had Jun's body exhumed and stripped of its
official seals because of his role in the death of Princess Zhu (Sgz, 64.1451).

[75]

Following Sgz pangzheng, 28.8a, we read [OMITTED] (po "to force.") for [OMITTED] (zhui "to
pursue"). Cf. Sgz jijie, 50.9b, which has [OMITTED]. Ding Tumulus was in Yu province,
south of modern Xuchang in He'nan. Sun Xiu was buried there in 265 (Sgz,
48.1163). Sgz, 48.1164 says,

In autumn, the seventh month [of Ganlu 1; i.e., August of 265], Sun
Hao forced Madam Zhu, the Empress Jing, to commit suicide. She
did not die in the main hall, and the funeral was held in a small
building in the garden. Everyone knew she had not been ill, and there
was none who did not grieve. He further sent Sun Xiu's four sons
to a small town in Wu. Shortly thereafter he had the two eldest of
them tracked down and killed.

Cf. Fang, The Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, 2:510. The True Record
of Jiankang
has:

In Yongan 7, seventh month [July/August 264] Emperor Jing [Sun
Xiu] died. . . . General of the Left (zuo jiangiun [OMITTED]) Wan Yu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] formerly had been prefect of Wucheng and got on well with [Sun]
Hao. . . . He subsequently spoke with the Empress Dowager Zhu,
and he wished to make the Latter Sovereign [Sun Hao] successor. The
empress said, "I am a widow. How would I know the concerns of
state? So long as the state of Wu does not perish and the ancestral


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temples are cared for, it is all right." Subsequently, it was decided to
welcome the Latter Sovereign. On a gengyin [OMITTED] day [July 26], he
acceded to the throne as emperor and changed the year to Yuanxing
[OMITTED] 1. . . . In autumn, the ninth month [October/November], [Sun
Hao] demoted the empress dowager to Empress Jing, referring to her
as the Palace of Peace and Stability. He posthumously bestowed on
his father, He, the title of Emperor Wen and reinterred him at Ming
Tumulus (Mingling [OMITTED]). He set up a park benefice of two hundred
households [to care for the tomb]. His great-grandmother Madam
Wang he made Empress of Great Virtue (da yi huanghou [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]), his mother Madam He [OMITTED] he made Empress Wen, and he
established the lady Madam Teng [OMITTED] as empress.

The empress's taboo name was Fanglan [OMITTED]. She was a third
cousin of Grand Master of Ceremonies Teng Yin. Her father was Mu
[OMITTED], who was general-of-the-household for all purposes. When the
emperor was marquis of Wucheng, he brought her in as concubine.
At this point, he named her empress and appointed [her father]
marquis of Gaomi [OMITTED]. Later she fell out of favor. Empress He
protected her and she was permanently supported in the Palace of
Ascendant Peace. In Tianji [OMITTED] 4 [280], she accompanied the
emperor when he moved northward, and she passed away at
Luoyang.

(Jksl[a], 4.63-64)

The True Record of Jiankang says that Sun Xiu died in the eighth month, falling
sick on a guiwei [OMITTED] day and expiring on a bingxu [OMITTED] day:

Eighth month, guiwei, the emperor fell ill and was unable to speak.
He wrote by hand, summoning Chancellor Puyang Xing [OMITTED] to
enter, and ordered the heir apparent Wan [OMITTED] to come out and do
obeisance to the chancellor. The emperor held Xing's shoulder and,
pointing at Wan, entrusted him [to Xing]. On bingxu the emperor
died in the inner hall. In the twelfth month he was buried at Dingling.

(Jksl[a], 3.61)

For a similar scene, in which the dying Emperor Ming of Wei entrusts Cao
Fang to Sima Yi, see the Wei Epitome and Sun Sheng's Wei shi chunqiu [OMITTED]
[OMITTED] [Spring and Autumn Annals of the House of Wei], quoted in Sgz, 3.114,
commentary. Both Chen Shou and Sima Guang say that Sun Xiu died on a
guiwei day, and the latter indicates that this occurred in the seventh month
(Jksl[a], 4.63; Sgz, 48.1162; Zztj, 78.2487). Since there was neither a guiwei
nor a bingxu day in the eighth month, Sun must have died in the seventh month.
If, as the True Record has it, he fell ill on guiwei and passed away on bingxu,
that would have been the twenty-fifth and twenty-eighth days respectively of
the seventh month (3 and 6 September 264; cf. Jksl[b], 3.88 nn. 30, 31; 4.115
n. 2). Sun Xiu's trust proved to have been misplaced, for Puyang Xing, believing
that circumstances called for a strong ruler, joined several other high officials
in deposing Wan in favor of Sun Hao. Subsequently, Xing was himself killed
on Sun Hao's orders (Sgz, 64.1451-1452).

The location of Gaomi is uncertain. There was a prefecture by this name
located not far from the modern city of the same name in Shandong province,
but it seems doubtful that this is the place referred to here.

[76]

The use of the title here is anachronistic. Following his surrender to the Jin


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armies on 3 May 280, which marked the end of Wu, Sun Hao was taken to
the Western Jin capital of Luoyang, where he was treated fairly leniently. He
was given the title Marquis Guiming (Marquis Who Has Submitted to the
Mandate; (see Sgz, 48.1177; Js, 3.71).

[77]

For another translation of the biography of dame He, see Fang, The Chronicles
of the Three Kingdoms,
2:160, 502. The word we have translated as "dame"
here is ji [OMITTED] (EH kjǝh in Coblin, A Handbook of Eastern Han Sound Glosses,
201). The commentator identified simply as Chen Zan [OMITTED] ("Your subject
Zan") cites two Han texts (now lost) that give the term as one of the ranks
of the harem, coming after favorite beauty and ahead of eighth rank lady. But
it is not found among the ranks given for consorts and concubines in the Han
History
(Hs, 97A.3935), and in fact there are three other ranks between favorite
beauty and eighth rank lady. Yan Shigu rejects the Chen Zan explanation,
saying,

"Ji" was originally the surname of the Zhou. [Zhou women] were
more noble than the women of the many states, so in order to give
the [Zhou] wives an attractive appellation, they were addressed as
ji by them. . . . Later, one came to refer generally to all concubines
(qie [OMITTED]) as ji. The Grand Scribe's Records' statement, "When Gaozu
dwelled in Shandong, he was fond of beautiful concubines (ji)," is
an example of this. If "dame" were a title of office, then one ought
not say "favored concubine (ji) Lady Qi." Moreover, the "Wai qi
zhuan" in setting forth the various offices pertaining to empresses and
consorts does not include a position of ji.

(Hs, 4.105 n. 2)

Ru Chun says that the word was pronounced like [OMITTED] (EH rjǝï in Coblin, A
Handbook of Eastern Han Sound Glosses,
224) and was a general term to
refer to concubines. This would seem to be correct. See Hanyu da zidian, 1049.
Cf. Dubs, The History of the Former Han Dynasty, 1:221 n. 1. We have
another example in Records of the Three States of the term's being employed
to refer to several of Cao Cao's secondary wives (see Sgz, 20.579). Jurong was
near the modern place by the same name southeast of Nanjing.

[78]

Peng Zu was China's Methuselah, who supposedly lived seven hundred years.
See, for example, Yuan, Zhongguo shenhua chuanshuo cidian, 378-379.

[79]

Sun Jun availed himself of the opportunity presented by the death of Zhuge
Ke to take the royal seal from Sun He and send him to Xindu. Sun He's consort
Zhang was Zhang Cheng's daughter and Zhuge Ke's niece. When Sun He was
ordered to commit suicide, Zhang told him, "We should share bad fortune
as well as good; I'll not live out my life alone!" and killed herself (Sgz, 59.1370;
Zztj, 76.2412).

[80]

Aside from this reference and one below, nothing is known about the Palace
of Ascendant Peace, which appears to have been a home for consorts who
were no longer in favor.

[81]

Liyang was almost directly south of the capital on the present-day Anhui-Jiangsu
border near Gucheng [OMITTED] lake; Xuancheng was farther south and
to the west of the present-day city of the same name. All seem to have been
of some strategic importance, judging by their locations and by references to
the last two as having been garrisoned.

[82]

Lu Bi says Wuling should be Hulin [OMITTED] (Sgz jijie, 50.10b). Liang Zhangju
says it should be Wulin [OMITTED] (Sgz pangzheng, 28.8b).

[83]

Zhang Bu was instrumental in putting Sun Hao on the throne following the
death of Sun Xiu, and he was honored for his efforts. Once Hao was on the
throne, however, he became arrogant, violent, and debauched, and Bu
surreptitiously expressed his dissatisfaction and was slandered to Hao. For this
Hao had him executed (Sgz, 48.1163).

[84]

Feng Chao Served as commandant of the guards under Sun Liang, who was
deposed in 258. In 256, Feng was appointed commissioner for inspection of
the army (jianjun shizhe [OMITTED]) to oversee military affairs in Xu province
(Sgz, 48.1152-1153).

[85]

"Step-shaker" hair ornaments were so called because they shook when the
wearer walked.

[86]

A similar story involving Sun Hao and one of his ladies is found in Sgz,
59.1375.

[87]

Sgz, 48.1170 gives supervisor of the three commanderies (sanjun du [OMITTED])
as Zhi's title. The three commanderies were Guiji, Linhai, and Jian'an, all of
which were along the coast of Yang province.

[88]

Teng Yin was a member of a faction that opposed Sun Lin after the latter
replaced Sun Jun as the dominant power at court. An effort to oust Sun Lin
failed, Teng's army was defeated by one of Sun's supporters, and Teng's family
was exterminated (Sgz, 48.1153).

[89]

This was in the twelfth month of Yuanxing 1 (265).

[90]

Cangwu commandery was on the border between modern Guangdong and
Guangxi and was the place of exile for a great many officials.

[91]

The Yellow Gates were those to the imperial quarters. During the Han there
were several positions—including prefect of the Yellow Gates, assistant of the
Yellow Gates, and palace attendant of the Yellow Gates—that were held by
eunuchs. See Bielenstein, The Bureaucracy of Han Times, 53, and Bielenstein,
"Lo-yang in Later Han Times," 24.

[92]

This number may be an understatement. Following his conquest of Wu,
Emperor Wu of Jin ordered selection of five thousand of Sun Hao's courtesans
and concubines to be taken into the palace (Js, 3.73). Presumably not all of
these were the daughters of high officials.

[93]

The sentence comes from the Classic of Changes, Hexagram 37, "Commentary
on the Decision." Cf. Wilhelm, I Ching, 570. Thus, just as Chen Shou began
his section on the Wei empresses and consorts with a quote from this passage,
so he returns to it in his judgment of the Wu arrangements concerning consorts
and concubines.

[94]

Mao shi 240/2.

[95]

Duke Huan gathered about himself several talented ministers, including Guan
Zhong, Baoshu Ya [OMITTED], and Xi Peng [OMITTED]. The duke had three consorts,
none of whom produced a son. But he also had six women in the inner
apartments whom be "treated as wives," and each of these produced a son.
One son was given to Duke Xiang of Song [OMITTED] to be his heir apparent.
When Duke Huan was on his deathbed, the other sons formed factions and
began to fight over the succession. After the duke died, the struggle broke into
open conflict. The palace was left with no one to encoffin the duke's corpse,
which was left unattended for over two months until "the maggots spilled out
the doorway" (Sj, 32.1493-1494; Chavannes, Mémoires historiques, 2:39-40).