Misplaced Pages

Queen Zhejue

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Chinese queen (fifth century AD)

Queen Zhejue (Chinese: 折掘王后; personal name unknown) was the only historically known queen of the Xianbei-led Chinese Southern Liang dynasty. Her husband was the state's final ruler, Tufa Rutan (Prince Jing).

Very little is known about Queen Zhejue, who was likely from the nearby Zhejue tribe, also of Xianbei extraction. She bore Tufa Rutan at least one son, the crown prince Tufa Hutai (禿髮虎台). It is unclear when she died, and it remains uncertain whether she survived the state's destruction in 414, as well as the death of her husband and son in 415 and 423, respectively, at the hands of Western Qin's king Qifu Chipan.

References

  1. "資治通鑑/卷114 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". zh.wikisource.org (in Chinese). Retrieved 2023-04-10.
  2. 何光岳 (2004). 东胡源流史 (in Chinese). 江西教育出版社. ISBN 978-7-5392-3926-2.
  3. 周伟洲 (2004). 早期党项史研究 (in Chinese). 中国社会科学出版社. ISBN 978-7-5004-4649-1.
  4. 陈华新 (1992). 中国历代后妃大观 (in Chinese). 海天出版社. ISBN 978-7-80542-467-5.
  5. Rong, Xinjiang (2022-10-31). The Silk Road and Cultural Exchanges between East and West. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-51259-7.
Chinese royalty
Preceded byPrincess Shi of Later Liang Queen of China (Southern Gansu/Eastern Qinghai)
408–414?
Succeeded byQueen Tufa of Western Qin
Preceded byEmpress Zhang of Later Qin Queen of China (Central Gansu)
408–410?
Succeeded byPrincess Meng of Northern Liang
Empresses, queens, and princesses of the Sixteen Kingdoms
Empresses, queens, and princesses consort
Cheng-Han (304–347)
Han-Zhao (304–329)
Later Zhao (319–351)
Former Liang (320–376)
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)
Xia (407–431)
Northern Yan (407–436)
Ran Wei (350–352)
Empresses and princesses dowager
Han-Zhao (304–329)
Later Zhao (319–351)
Former Yan (337–370)
Former Qin (351–394)
Later Yan (384–409)
Later Liang (386–403)
Southern Yan (398–410)
Western Liang (400–421)
Posthumous empresses
Later Yan (384–409)
Xia → ShangZhouQinHan3 KingdomsJìn / 16 KingdomsS. Dynasties / N. DynastiesSuiTang5 Dynasties & 10 KingdomsLiao / Song / W. Xia / JīnYuanMingQing


Stub icon

This Chinese royalty–related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: