Emperor Ming of Wei 魏明帝 | |||||||||||||||||
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Emperor of Cao Wei | |||||||||||||||||
Reign | 29 June 226 – 22 January 239 | ||||||||||||||||
Predecessor | Cao Pi | ||||||||||||||||
Successor | Cao Fang | ||||||||||||||||
Crown Prince of Cao Wei | |||||||||||||||||
Tenure | 28 June 226[1] – 29 June 226 | ||||||||||||||||
Successor | Cao Fang | ||||||||||||||||
Prince of Pingyuan (平原王) | |||||||||||||||||
Tenure | 30 March 222 – 28 June 226 | ||||||||||||||||
Duke of Qi (齊公) | |||||||||||||||||
Tenure | 221 – 30 March 222[2] | ||||||||||||||||
Born | 204[a] or 205[b] | ||||||||||||||||
Died | Luoyang, Wei dynasty | 22 January 239 (aged 34 or 35)||||||||||||||||
Burial | |||||||||||||||||
Consorts | Lady Yu Empress Mingdao Empress Mingyuan | ||||||||||||||||
Issue | Cao Yin, Prince Ai of Anping Cao Jiong, Prince of Qinghe Cao Mu, Prince of Fanyang Princess Yi of Pingyuan Princess Qi | ||||||||||||||||
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House | House of Cao | ||||||||||||||||
Father | Cao Pi | ||||||||||||||||
Mother | Empress Wenzhao |
Cao Rui | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese | 曹叡 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Cao Rui (courtesy name Yuanzhong, was the second emperor of the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period. His parentage is in dispute: his mother, Lady Zhen, was Yuan Xi's wife, but she later remarried Cao Pi, the first ruler of Wei. Based on conflicting accounts of his age, Pei Songzhi calculated that, in order to be Cao Pi's son, Cao Rui could not have been 36 (by East Asian age reckoning) when he died as recorded, so the recorded age was in error; late-Qing scholars Lu Bi (卢弼) and Mao Guangsheng (冒广生) argued instead that Cao Rui was Yuan Xi's son.
) (204 or 205 – 22 January 239),Cao Rui's reign was viewed in many different ways throughout Chinese history. He devoted many resources into building palaces and ancestral temples, and his reign saw the stalemate between his empire, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu become more entrenched. His building projects and his desire to have many concubines (who numbered in the thousands) greatly exhausted the imperial treasury.
On his deathbed, he had no biological son. He passed the throne to his adopted son Cao Fang and entrusted him to the regency of Cao Shuang and Sima Yi. This would prove to be a fatal mistake for his clan, as Cao Shuang monopolised power and governed incompetently, eventually drawing a violent reaction from Sima Yi, who overthrew him in a coup d'état (Incident at the Gaoping Tombs). Sima Yi became in control of the Wei government from February 249, eventually allowing his grandson Sima Yan to usurp the throne in February 266. After his death, Cao Rui was posthumously honoured as "Emperor Ming" with the temple name "Liezu".
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