Liu Cong (Han-Zhao)

Emperor Zhaowu of Han
漢昭武帝
Depiction of Liu Cong from "A Chained Remonstration" (鎖諫圖), attributed to the Tang dynasty painter, Yan Liben.
Emperor of Han-Zhao
ReignSeptember 28, 310[1][2] – August 31, 318[3]
PredecessorLiu He
SuccessorLiu Can
BornUnknown
Died31 August 318[3][4]
Burial
Xuanguang Mausoleum (宣光陵)
Spouse
Issuesee #Personal information
Names
Family name: Liu (劉)
Given name: Cong (聰)
Courtesy name: Xuanming (玄明)
Nickname: Zai (載)
Era dates
  • Guāngxīng (光興): 310–311
  • Jiāpíng (嘉平): 311–315
  • Jiànyuán (建元): 315–316
  • Línjiā (麟嘉): 316–318
Posthumous name
Emperor Zhaowu (昭武皇帝)
Temple name
Liezong (烈宗)
HouseLiu
DynastyHan-Zhao
FatherLiu Yuan
MotherConsort Zhang

Liu Cong (died 31 August 318), courtesy name Xuanming, nickname Zai, also known by his posthumous name as the Emperor Zhaowu of Han (Zhao), was an emperor of the Xiongnu-led Chinese Han-Zhao dynasty. During his reign, the Han-Zhao brought the fall of the Western Jin dynasty, leading to its re-establishment in the south as the Eastern Jin dynasty at Jiankang in 318. His forces conquered the ancient Chinese capitals of Luoyang and Chang'an. He also captured the Emperor Huai of Jin and the Emperor Min of Jin, who he both executed after forcing them to act as cupbearers.[5]

Liu Cong's reign was one filled with contradictions. He was a ruler who was obviously intelligent and capable of logical reasoning, and during his father Liu Yuan's reign, he was a capable general as well. On the other hand, as his reign progressed, he became increasingly cruel, unstable, extravagant, and unable to listen to proper advice. Faced with opposition from his own ministers, he greatly empowered his eunuchs and consort kins, leading to political instability which ended in a bloody purge of the Han court. Meanwhile, the Han expanded from a small state occupying modern southern Shanxi to encompassing nearly all of modern Shanxi, Shaanxi, eastern Gansu, and significant portions of Shandong, Hebei, and Henan—although the eastern half of the empire was under the control of the warlord Shi Le, who Liu Cong had little to no power to restrain. After his death, his successor and family members in the capital were slaughtered by a consort kin, Jin Zhun, and not long after, the empire was split into two between his cousin, Liu Yao in the west and Shi Le in the east.

  1. ^ "中央研究院".
  2. ^ Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 87.
  3. ^ a b "中央研究院".
  4. ^ Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 90.
  5. ^ Grousset, Rene (1970). The Empire of the Steppes. Rutgers University Press. pp. 56-57. ISBN 0-8135-1304-9.