Xu Da | |
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徐達 | |
Left Grand Councilor | |
In office 1371–1371 | |
Preceded by | Li Shanchang |
Succeeded by | Hu Weiyong |
Right Grand Councilor | |
In office 1368–1371 | |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Wang Guangyang |
Duke of Wei | |
In office 1485–1370 | |
Succeeded by | Xu Huizu |
Personal details | |
Born | 1332 Yuan Zhishun 3 (元至順三年) Yongfeng Township, Zhongli County, Hao Prefecture, Anfeng Lu, Henan Jiangbei Province |
Died | 1385 (aged 52–53) Ming Hongwu 18 (明洪武十八年) Yingtian Prefecture |
Spouses |
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Children | Xu Huizu, Duke of Wei Xu Tianfu Xu Zengshou, Duke of Ding Xu Yihua, Empress Renxiaowen Princess Consort of Dai Princess Consort of An Xu Yingxu Xu Miaojin |
Xu Da (1332–1385), courtesy name Tiande, known by his title as Duke of Wei (魏國公), later posthumously as Prince of Zhongshan (中山王), was a Chinese military general and official who lived in the late Yuan dynasty and early Ming dynasty. He was a friend of the Hongwu Emperor, the founder and first ruler of the Ming dynasty, and assisted him in overthrowing the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty and establishing the Ming dynasty. He was also the father of Empress Xu, who married the third Ming ruler, the Yongle Emperor, and maternal grandfather of the Hongxi Emperor. All but two subsequent Ming and Southern Ming emperors were descended from him.
Xu Da was cautious and skilled in governing the army, making outstanding contributions to the establishment of the Ming Dynasty and the recovery of Chinese territory. Zhu Yuanzhang praised him as "the Great Wall" of the Ming Dynasty. After his death, Xu Da was posthumously honored as the title "King of Zhongshan" (中山王) by Zhu in 1385, ranking first in the Imperial Ancestral Temples and Portrait Temples of Meritorious Officials.[1]