Coup d'état in the state of Cao Wei (249)
Incident at the Gaoping Tombs |
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Date | 5 February 249[1] |
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Location | |
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Result |
Sima Yi seized power from Cao Shuang |
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Belligerents |
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Sima Yi |
Cao Shuang |
Commanders and leaders |
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Sima Yi |
Cao Shuang Cao Xi Cao Xun |
The Incident at the Gaoping Tombs was a coup d'état that took place on 5 February 249 in the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) of China. The parties involved were Sima Yi and Cao Shuang, who were both regents for the Cao Wei emperor Cao Fang, who was then about 17 years old. On that day, while Cao Shuang and his brothers accompanied the emperor on a visit to the Gaoping tombs, Sima Yi staged a coup d'état; taking control of the capital city of Luoyang and issuing a memorial which listed out the various crimes Cao Shuang had committed. Cao Shuang surrendered and gave up his powers after further receiving reassurance that he and his family would be spared, thinking that he could still live a life in luxury. Shortly thereafter, Cao Shuang, his brothers, and his supporters were charged with treason and executed along with their families on 9 February. The coup d'état increased the Sima family's influence and paved the way for the eventual replacement of the Cao Wei regime by the Sima family's Jin dynasty in February 266.
- ^ jiawu day of the 1st month of the 1st year of the Jia'ping era, per Cao Fang's biography in vol. 04 of Sanguozhi