Guo Huai | |
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郭淮 | |
General of Chariots and Cavalry (車騎將軍) | |
In office June or July 250 – 23 February 255 | |
Monarch | Cao Fang / Cao Mao |
Preceded by | Wang Ling |
General Who Attacks the West (征西將軍) | |
In office 249 – June or July 250 | |
Monarch | Cao Fang |
General of the Vanguard (前將軍) | |
In office 240 –249 | |
Monarch | Cao Fang |
General of the Left (左將軍) | |
In office 240 | |
Monarch | Cao Fang |
Inspector of Yong Province (雍州刺史) | |
In office 220 –255 | |
Monarch | Cao Pi / Cao Rui / Cao Fang / Cao Mao |
Major (司馬) | |
In office 215–220 | |
Monarch | Emperor Xian of Han |
Chancellor | Cao Cao |
Personal details | |
Born | Unknown Yangqu County, Shanxi |
Died | [a] | 23 February 255
Spouse | Wang Ling's sister |
Children |
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Parent |
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Relatives |
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Occupation | Military general |
Courtesy name | Boji (伯濟) |
Posthumous name | Marquis Zhen (貞侯) |
Peerage | Marquis of Yangqu (陽曲侯) |
Guo Huai (died 23 February 255),[a] courtesy name Boji, was a Chinese military general of the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He started his career towards the end of the Eastern Han dynasty under the warlord Cao Cao as a subordinate of Cao Cao's generals Xiahou Yuan and Zhang He. During the Three Kingdoms period, he served in Wei, the state established by Cao Cao's son Cao Pi, and lived through the reigns of four Wei emperors (Cao Pi, Cao Rui, Cao Fang and Cao Mao). From the 220s until his death in 255, he governed and defended Wei's western borders in Yong and Liang provinces (covering parts of present-day Gansu, Shaanxi, Ningxia, Qinghai and Inner Mongolia). During this time, he resisted multiple invasions by Wei's rival state, Shu Han, and quelled some rebellions by local Qiang, Di and other non-Han Chinese tribes.[2]
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