Pan Shu 潘淑 | |
---|---|
![]() Empress Pan, drawn by Wu Youru | |
Empress consort of Eastern Wu | |
Tenure | June or July 251 – February or March 252 |
Successor | Empress Quan |
Born | Unknown Ningbo, Zhejiang |
Died | February or March 252 Nanjing, Jiangsu |
Burial | |
Spouse | Sun Quan |
Issue | Sun Liang |
Empress Pan (died February or March 252 [1] ), personal name Pan Shu, [2] was an empress of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. She was the only empress of Wu's founding emperor, Sun Quan, even though he had a succession of wives before her. She was a rare example of becoming an empress from a slave in the Chinese history. She was the mother of Sun Liang, Sun Quan's successor and the second emperor of Wu.
Lady Pan was from Gouzhang County (句章縣; within present-day Ningbo) in Kuaiji Commandery. Her personal name was not recorded in her biography in the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi), the authoritative source of the history of the Three Kingdoms period. However, the Jiankang Shilu mentioned that her personal name was "Shu", hence she was also known as "Pan Shu". [2] Her father, who served as a low-ranking official, was executed for committing an offence whose details are not recorded. Lady Pan were forced to become slave and assigned to the royal textile factory.
Lady Pan was a legendary beauty, especially known for her melancholic appearance. [3] Once, Sun Quan encountered her and felt that she was extraordinary so he took her as his concubine. The historical treatise Shi Yi Ji provided a more detailed description of their encounter. It mentioned that Lady Pan was known as the most beautiful woman in Jiangdong. When she was still working in the textile factory, people around her respected and kept a distance from her, calling her a goddess. After Sun Quan heard about this story, he ordered the painter to draw Lady Pan's portrait. Although Lady Pan looked glum in the portrait, Sun Quan was shocked because of her beauty and exclaimed:"She is a goddess, indeed. Her sadness is so attractive, let alone her smile." Sun Quan arranged a magnificent carriage to take her into the palace and doted on her from then on. [4] Lady Pan was such a charming woman who was good at obtaining the emperor' favor. Thus she expressed her jealousy freely and never ceased slandering and harming Sun Quan's other wives until her death. [5]
When Lady Pan was becoming increasingly favoured by Sun Quan, Sun He, the third son of Suan Quan, just became the heir in 242, Sun Quan decided to show respect to the heir's mother Lady Wang through dismissing other favored ladies. [6] Lady Pan, on the other hand, was allowed to stay with Sun Quan even when he was traveling. There are two anecdotes about Pan at this time. One of the stories said that the emperor and Pan often visited a pavilion called Zhaoxuan together. When Lady Pan felt very happy, she drank a lot of wine and poured the remaining wine under the high platform. At this moment, a ruby ring fell out of the wine glass. The wife hung the ruby ring on a pomegranate branch, and Sun Quan built a palace for her called Liuhuantai (榴環臺) for her, which means "the palace of pomegranate and ring". Another story reflects the Pan's intelligence. Lady Pan once went fishing with the Sun Quan, Sun Quan felt very happy to catch a big fish. Pan, however, was worried and said, "Today is so happy, will there be a day of worry in the future?" People believed that the Pan's words foreshadowed the political chaos at the end of Sun Quan's reign. [7]
Lady Pan was pregnant. She dreamt of receiving a dragon head and gave birth to Sun Liang in 243. As the favourites of Sun Quan, Pan Shu and Sun Liang are expected to become empress and crown prince respectively. Later in 250, in the aftermath of a succession struggle between Sun Quan's sons Sun He and Sun Ba, Sun Liang was designated as the crown prince by his father.
In 251, Sun Quan instated Lady Pan as the empress. Before that, none of the concubines, including the crown prince's mother, were officially stated as empress since Suan Quan once declared that he would not appoint concubine as the empress. [8] An amnesty was implemented and new era date was used in order to celebrate Pan becoming the empress. [9] It could be seen that among Sun Quan's many favored concubines, Pan Shu, as a special presence, had been valued.
When Sun Quan became seriously ill in 252, Empress Pan asked Sun Hong (孫弘), the Prefect of the Palace Writers (中書令), about how Empress Lü governed a country after the death of her husband (Emperor Gao of the Han dynasty). However, she herself also fell sick due to the stress of continuously attending to Sun Quan. She was ultimately murdered when she was in deep sleep. Wu officials claimed that her servants strangled her while she was asleep and claimed her death was of natural causes; why she was murdered remains a controversy as the Sanguozhi did not mention the reason of murder. The Jiankang Shilu states that it was because the servants was unwilling to take care of both the seriously ill emperor and the empress, so they murdered the empress to alleviate the burden. [10] Additionally, the Zizhi Tongjian states that Empress Pan abused the servants, so the empress was murdered. However, a number of historians, including Hu Sanxing, a commentator on Sima Guang's Zizhi Tongjian, pointed out that this claim is unfounded and it is a misinterpretation of the original text. He also believed that top Wu officials were complicit, as they feared that she would seize power as empress dowager after Sun Quan's death. [11] Investigations into her death resulted in the execution of 6-7 people. After Empress Pan's death, subjects felt sad and arranged a prayer ceremony for her. [12] Sun Quan died soon after in the same year. Empress Pan was buried together with Sun Quan at the Jiang Mausoleum (蔣陵; at the Purple Mountain, Nanjing, Jiangsu). [13]
According to Wang Jia, Pan and Sun Quan's other concubine, Lady Zhao, are equally famous. They are compared to the Goddess of the Luo River and Yaoji due to their beauty and talent [14] . On the other hand, Zhu Ju compare her to Li Ji, believing that she may have played some important role in deposing the former crown prince. [15]
Pan often appears in the theme of one hundred beauties in ancient China. Renowned Qing dynasty painters such as Wang Hui and Wu Youru had painted Pan’s impressionistic paintings. The scene of Pan Shu being invited to the palace, which mentioned in the "Shiyiji", was very popular. Yuan Mei, a Chinese poet of the Qing Dynasty, wrote,
The poor girl's face was full of tears, imprisoned in the textile factory. The last place that could move the emperor was the sad expression on the painting.
滿面啼痕淚不收,堪憐織室竟同幽,誰知感動君王處,就在圖中一點愁。
Pan was briefly introduced in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Like her husband, Empress Pan also showed enthusiasm for Buddhism. She made contributions to the dissemination of Buddhism and established the first Buddhist temple called Huibaosi (惠寶寺) in Wuchang, the provisional capital of Eastern Wu. [16]
In addition to her father who served as a low-level official, Empress Pan also had an elder sister, who was sent to the textile factory together.In 250, Lady Pan requested Sun Quan to emancipate her elder sister from slavery and arrange a marriage for her sister and he agreed. Lady Pan's sister later married Tan Shao (譚紹). When Sun Liang became the new emperor, he commissioned his uncle as a Cavalry Commandant (騎都尉). After Sun Liang was demoted to a prince under Sun Chen's persecution, Tan Shao lost his official position and was sent back to his home town of Luling with his family. [17]
The Battle of Xiaoting (猇亭之戰), also known as the Battle of Yiling and the Battle of Yiling and Xiaoting, was fought between the state of Shu and the state of Wu, between the years 221 and 222 in the early Three Kingdoms period of China. The battle is significant because Wu was able to turn the situation from a series of initial losses into a defensive stalemate, before proceeding to win a decisive victory over Shu. The Wu victory halted the Shu invasion and preceded the death of Liu Bei, Shu's founding emperor.
Zhang Zhao (156–236), courtesy name Zibu, was a Chinese calligrapher, essayist, military general, and politician. He served as an official of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. Born in the late Eastern Han dynasty, Zhang Zhao started his career as a scholar in his native Xu Province before the chaos towards the end of the Eastern Han dynasty forced him to flee south to the Jiangdong region for shelter. In Jiangdong, Zhang Zhao became an adviser to the rising warlord Sun Ce. After Sun Ce's death in the year 200, Zhang Zhao played a key supporting role to Sun Ce's younger brother and successor, Sun Quan, as he consolidated power and his control over the Jiangdong territories. In 208, Zhang Zhao strongly urged Sun Quan to surrender to Cao Cao, a rival warlord, because he believed that they stood no chance against an impending invasion by Cao Cao. However, Sun Quan refused to listen to Zhang Zhao and instead heeded the advice of Lu Su and Zhou Yu. Sun Quan's forces ultimately scored a decisive victory over Cao Cao at the Battle of Red Cliffs in the winter of 208. From 200 until his death in 236, Zhang Zhao served under Sun Quan through the collapse of the Eastern Han dynasty and into the Three Kingdoms period after Sun Quan became the founding emperor of the Eastern Wu state. Throughout his career, Zhang Zhao was known for being a stern, uncompromising and intimidating figure who commanded respect from both his colleagues and Sun Quan. Despite Zhang Zhao's seniority and experience, Sun Quan passed him over twice as a candidate for the position of Imperial Chancellor in 222 and 225 as he believed that Zhang Zhao was so headstrong and stubborn that he would not be able to effectively lead the administration. Nevertheless, Sun Quan paid his due respects to Zhang Zhao as a mentor-like figure who saw him through his formative years to his accession to the throne.
Lady Wu, personal name unknown, was a Chinese noble lady, aristocrat and posthumously honoured as Empress of Eastern Wu state. She was the wife of the warlord Sun Jian, who lived during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. She bore Sun Jian four sons and a daughter – Sun Ce, Sun Quan, Sun Yi, Sun Kuang and Lady Sun. She was posthumously honoured as Empress Wulie in 229 by her second son Sun Quan, who became the founding emperor of the state of Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period.
Lady Gan was a concubine of Liu Bei, the founding emperor of the state of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period of China and Liu Shan's mother. She was later posthumously honoured as Lady Huangsi which means "the Lady whom the Emperor misses" by Liu Bei. Then after his death, she was named Empress Zhaolie by her son to match his father's posthumous title. In the Gazette of Kuizhou Prefecture (夔州府志) compiled in 1513, her name is given as Gan Mei (甘梅), though the compiler deems the name fictitious.
Empress Wu, personal name Wu Xian, formally known as Empress Mu, was an empress of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period. She was the last wife and the only empress of Liu Bei, the founding emperor of Shu Han, and a younger sister of Wu Yi.
Sun Liang, courtesy name Ziming, was the second emperor of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He was the youngest son and heir of Sun Quan, the founding emperor of Wu. He is also known as the Prince of Kuaiji or Marquis of Houguan (候官侯), which were his successive titles after he was deposed in November 258 by the regent Sun Chen and is sometimes known as the Young Emperor. He was succeeded by his brother Sun Xiu, who managed to oust Sun Chen from power and kill him. Two years after Sun Liang's dethronement, he was falsely accused of treason and demoted from a prince to a marquis, after which he killed himself.
Empress Quan, also known as Quan Huijie, was an empress of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. She was married to Sun Liang, the second emperor of Wu.
Sun He, courtesy name Zixiao, was an imperial prince of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He was the third son of Sun Quan, the founding emperor of Wu. In 242, he became the crown prince after the death of his brother Sun Deng, the eldest son and first heir apparent of Sun Quan. In the 240s, a power struggle broke out between Sun He and his fourth brother, Sun Ba, over the succession to their father's throne. The conflict ended in 250 when Sun Quan forced Sun Ba to commit suicide, deposed Sun He and replaced him with Sun Liang. In 253, during Sun Liang's reign, the regent Sun Jun reduced Sun He to commoner status and forced him to commit suicide. In 264, one of Sun He's sons, Sun Hao, became the fourth emperor of Eastern Wu. After his coronation, Sun Hao honoured his father with the posthumous title Emperor Wen.
Sun Yi (184–204), courtesy name Shubi, was Chinese military general and politician who was a younger brother of Sun Quan, the founding emperor of the state of Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period of China. He was the husband of Lady Xu
Gu Tan, courtesy name Zimo, was an official of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China.
Pan Jun, courtesy name Chengming, was a minister and military general of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. Originally a minor official serving under the warlords Liu Biao and later Liu Bei in Jing Province, Pan Jun reluctantly switched allegiance to another warlord Sun Quan after Sun Quan seized control of Liu Bei's territories in Jing Province in 220. While serving under Sun Quan, Pan Jun held military commands and quelled a rebellion. After Sun Quan became emperor in 229, he appointed Pan Jun as Minister Steward and later Minister of Ceremonies. During this time, Pan Jun joined the general Lü Dai in suppressing a rebellion by indigenous tribes in his native Wuling Commandery. He also oversaw civil and military affairs in Wuchang alongside the general Lu Xun. In the 230s, he repeatedly spoke up against Lü Yi's abuses of power and even planned to assassinate him. Throughout his life, Pan Jun was known for being a man of bold character and an honest official who strictly and fairly upheld the law without fearing how others would see him.
Bu Zhi, courtesy name Zishan, was a Chinese military general and politician of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period of China. Originally a scholar of humble background, he became a subordinate of the warlord Sun Quan in the late Eastern Han dynasty and gradually rose through the ranks. Between 210 and 220, he served as the governor of the remote and restive Jiao Province in southern China. During the Battle of Xiaoting/Yiling of 221–222, he quelled local uprisings in Sun Quan's territories in southern Jing Province and maintained peace in the area. After Sun Quan became emperor in 229, Bu Zhi oversaw the Wu armed forces guarding the Wu–Shu border at Xiling for about 20 years. During this time, he also gave advice to Sun Quan's first heir apparent, Sun Deng, and spoke up for officials affected by Lü Yi's abuses of power. In 246, he became the fourth Imperial Chancellor of Wu, but died in office in the following year.
Lady Bu, personal name Bu Lianshi, was a concubine of Sun Quan, the founding emperor of the state of Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period of China. She has posthumously been honoured as an empress by Sun Quan. She is also known as Empress Bu.
This article contains the family trees of members of the Sun clan, who ruled the state of Eastern Wu (229–280), in the Three Kingdoms period (220–280), in China.
This article contains the family trees of members of the Liu clan, who ruled the state of Shu Han (221-263) in the Three Kingdoms period (220-280) in China. They were related to the House of Liu, the imperial clan of the Han dynasty.
This article contains the family trees of members of the Cao clan, who ruled the state of Cao Wei (220–265) in the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) in China. Only Cao Cao's lineage is shown in this article. The lineages of his relatives, such as Cao Ren, Cao Zhen and others, are not included here.
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