Mu Ying

Mu Ying
沐英
Mu Ying painted by Tang Yin (c. 1500)
Marquis of Xiping
In office
1377–1392
Succeeded byMu Chun
Personal details
Born1345 (1345)
Dingyuan County, Hao Prefecture, Henan, Yuan China (mordern Dingyuan County, Chuzhou, Anhui)
Died1392 (1393) (aged 47)
Yunnan Fu, Yunnan, Ming China (mordern Kunming, Yunnan)
Children
Parent(s)Mu Chao (father)
Lady Gu
Hongwu Emperor (adoptive father)
OccupationMilitary general, politician
Courtesy nameWenying (文英)
Posthumous nameZhaojing (昭靖)
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Mu Ying (沐英, 1345–1392) was a Chinese military general and politician during the Ming dynasty, and an adopted son of its founder, the Hongwu Emperor.[1] He played an important role in establishing Ming authority in Yunnan.[2]

When the Ming dynasty emerged, the Hongwu Emperor's military officers who served under him were given noble titles which privileged the holder with a stipend but in all other aspects was merely symbolic.[3] Mu Ying's family was among them.[4][5][6][7][8] Special rules guarding against potential abuse of power were implemented on the nobles.[9] His family remained in Yunnan where Mu and his descendants guarded until the end of the Ming dynasty.[10] As late as the 1650s, his descendant Mu Tianbo was one of the main supporters of the Yongli Emperor, the last emperor of the Southern Ming, and accompanied the fugitive emperor all the way into Toungoo Burma.[11]

  1. ^ Hagras, Hamada (2019-12-20). "The Ming Court as Patron of the Chinese Islamic Architecture: The Case Study of the Daxuexi Mosque in Xi'an". SHEDET (6): 134–158. doi:10.36816/shedet.006.08.
  2. ^ Twitchett, Denis (1998). The Cambridge History of China Volume 7 The Ming Dynasty, 1368—1644, Part I. Cambridge University Press. p. 130.
  3. ^ FREDERIC WAKEMAN JR. (1985). The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China. University of California Press. pp. 343–344. ISBN 978-0-520-04804-1.
  4. ^ "Between Winds and Clouds: Chapter 3".
  5. ^ "Between Winds and Clouds: Chapter 4".
  6. ^ "Between Winds and Clouds: Chapter 5".
  7. ^ "Gold Treasures Discovered in Ming Dynasty Tomb (Photos)". Live Science. 13 May 2015.
  8. ^ "Ming Dynasty Tomb Tells a Remarkable Life's Story". 14 May 2015.
  9. ^ Frederick W. Mote; Denis Twitchett (26 February 1988). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 7, The Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644. Cambridge University Press. pp. 133–134. ISBN 978-0-521-24332-2.
  10. ^ Nicholas Belfield Dennys (1888). The China Review, Or, Notes and Queries on the Far East. "China Mail" Office. pp. 233–.
  11. ^ Struve, Lynn A. (translator and editor) (1993), Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm: China in Tigers' Jaws, Yale University Press, pp. 242, 247, ISBN 0-300-07553-7 {{citation}}: |first= has generic name (help)