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Li Xun 李恂 | |||||||||||||
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Ruler of Western Liang | |||||||||||||
Reign | 420–421 | ||||||||||||
Predecessor | Li Xin | ||||||||||||
Born | Unknown | ||||||||||||
Died | 421 | ||||||||||||
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House | Li | ||||||||||||
Dynasty | Western Liang | ||||||||||||
Father | Li Gao |
Li Xun (Chinese: 李恂; died 421), courtesy name Shiru (士如), was the final ruler of China's Western Liang dynasty during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. Li Xun tried to hold out against the conquering Northern Liang armies under its prince Juqu Mengxun, after his brother Li Xin's death in 420. He was only able to hold the city of Dunhuang for several months, before Juqu Mengxun successfully sieged the city, and Li Xun committed suicide, which marked the collapse of the Western Liang dynasty.
Brief reign
Very little is known about Li Xun's life, including whether he was the son of his brother Li Xin's mother Princess Dowager Yin. Under his father Li Gao (Prince Wuzhao) and/or Li Xin, Li Xun successively served as the governor of Jiuquan (酒泉, roughly modern Jiuquan, Gansu) and Dunhuang Commanderies. His rule of Dunhuang was said to be benevolent and favored by the people. In 420, while trying to attack Northern Liang, Li Xin fell into a trap set by Juqu Mengxun and was killed in battle. Juqu Mengxun then quickly reached the Western Liang capital Jiuquan, and Li Xin's other brothers abandoned Jiuquan and fled to Dunhuang. Once they reached Dunhuang, they and Li Xun, then the governor of Dunhuang, abandoned Dunhuang and fled to the hills north of Dunhuang.
Juqu Mengxun commissioned Suo Yuanxu (索元緒) to be the governor of Dunhuang. However, Suo quickly lost favor with the people by being rude, dishonest, and cruel. Some people of Dunhuang, under the leadership of Song Cheng (宋承) and Zhang Hong (張弘), secretly invited Li Xun back to Dunhuang, and in winter 420 he did so, forcing Suo to flee. Song and Zhang offered Li Xun the titles of Champion General (冠軍將軍) and Inspector of Liang Province (涼州刺史), and he changed the era name to signify that Western Liang was still a state. Juqu Mengxun then sent his heir apparent Juqu Zhengde (沮渠政德) to attack Dunhuang, and Li Xun defended the city, refusing to engage Juqu Zhengde.
However, Juqu Mengxun soon arrived, and he built levees to accumulate water around Dunhuang. Li Xun offered to surrender, but Juqu Mengxun refused. At this point, Song Cheng betrayed him and offered the city to Juqu Mengxun. Upon hearing this, Li Xun committed suicide, and Juqu Mengxun slaughtered the city. Western Liang was at its end.
Notes
- In this Chinese name, the family name is Li.
References
- Book of Jin, vol. 87.
- Book of Wei, vol. 99.
- History of the Northern Dynasties, vol. 100.
- Spring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms, vol. 8.
- Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 119.
Lord of (Western) LiangHouse of Li Died: 421 | ||
Chinese nobility | ||
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Preceded byLi Xin | Duke of Western Liang 420–421 |
Extinct |
Duke of Jiuquan 420–421 |
ForfeitTitle next held byHelian Lun | |
Titles in pretence | ||
Preceded byLi Xin | — TITULAR — Emperor of China 420–421 Reason for succession failure: Annexed by Northern Liang |
Succeeded byJuqu Mengxun |
Monarchs of the Sixteen Kingdoms | |
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Cheng-Han (304–347) | |
Han-Zhao (304–329) | |
Former Liang (318–376) | |
Later Zhao (319–351) | |
Former Yan (337–370) | |
Former Qin (351–394) | |
Later Yan (384–409) | |
Later Qin (384–417) | |
Western Qin (385–431) | |
Later Liang (386–403) | |
Southern Liang (397–414) | |
Northern Liang (397–460) | |
Southern Yan (398–410) | |
Western Liang (400–421) | |
Xia (407–431) | |
Northern Yan (407–436) | |
Chouchi (296–443) | |
Dai (310–376) |
|
Ran Wei (350–352) | |
Duan Qi (350–356) | |
Western Yan (384–394) | |
Zhai Wei (388–392) | |
Huan Chu (403–404) | |
Western Shu (405–413) | |
Xia → Shang → Zhou → Qin → Han → 3 Kingdoms → Jìn / 16 Kingdoms → S. Dynasties / N. Dynasties → Sui → Tang → 5 Dynasties & 10 Kingdoms → Liao / Song / W. Xia / Jīn → Yuan → Ming → Qing → ROC / PRC |