Cheng Pu
Cheng Pu | |
---|---|
General of Sun Quan | |
Born | (Unknown) |
Died | after 210[1] |
Names | |
Traditional Chinese | 程普 |
Simplified Chinese | 程普 |
Pinyin | Chéng Pǔ |
Wade–Giles | Ch'eng Pu |
Courtesy name | Demou (simplified Chinese: 德谋; traditional Chinese: 德謀; pinyin: Démóu; Wade–Giles: Te-mou) |
Other names | Cheng Gong (Chinese: 程公; pinyin: Chéng GÅng; Wade–Giles: Ch'eng Kung; literally: "Elder Cheng") |
Cheng Pu (died after 210),[1][2] courtesy name Demou, was a military general serving under the warlord Sun Quan in the late Eastern Han dynasty. He previously served under Sun Quan's predecessors – Sun Jian (Sun Quan's father) and Sun Ce (Sun Quan's elder brother).
Early career under Sun Jian
Cheng Pu was from Tuyin County (åœŸåž ç¸£), Youbeiping Commandery (å³åŒ—平郡), which is located east of present-day Fengrun District, Tangshan, Hebei. He initially served as a minor official in the local commandery office. He was good-looking, resourceful, and well versed in military strategy.[3]
Cheng Pu later came to serve Sun Jian and joined him in suppressing the Yellow Turban Rebellion in the 180s, defeating the rebels at Wan (宛; present-day Wancheng District, Nanyang, Henan) and Deng (鄧; present-day Dengzhou, Nanyang, Henan). In 190, he participated in the campaign against Dong Zhuo on Sun Jian's side, and defeated Dong's forces at Yangren (陽人). Cheng Pu fought in several battles and had been wounded many times.[4]
Service under Sun Ce
Sun Jian died in 191 and was succeeded by his eldest son Sun Ce. Cheng Pu continued serving under Sun Ce and accompanied him on his conquests in the Jiangdong region. He aided Sun Ce in conquering Lujiang Commandery (廬江郡) before they crossed the Yangtze River and attacked Hengjiang (橫江), Dangli (當利), where they defeated Zhang Ying and Yu Mi, the subordinates of a rival warlord Liu Yao. Cheng Pu also participated in the conquests of Moling (秣陵), Hushu (湖熟), Jurong (å¥å®¹) and Qu'e (曲阿). In recognition of his contributions, he was given an additional 2,000 troops under his command and awarded 50 horses. He made many achievements in battle in the subsequent conquests of Wucheng (çƒç¨‹), Shimu (石木), Bomen (波門), Lingchuan (陵傳) and Yuhang (餘æ).[5]
After Sun Ce conquered Kuaiji Commandery (present-day Shaoxing, Zhejiang) from its administrator Wang Lang, he appointed Cheng Pu as the Commandant (都尉) of Wu Commandery (å³éƒ¡), with the commandery capital at Qiantang County (錢å”縣). Cheng Pu was later reassigned as the Commandant of Danyang Commandery (丹楊郡) and he moved to Shicheng County (石城縣). He participated in the campaigns at Xuancheng (宣城) and Jing (涇), and helped to pacify rebellions in Wu (å³), Lingyang (陵陽) and Chungu (春穀) counties. When Sun Ce was attacking the bandits led by Zu Lang, he was surrounded by the enemy, but Cheng Pu, accompanied by only one horseman, charged into the encirclement to rescue his lord. Cheng Pu fought fiercely and the bandits withdrew in fear, allowing Sun Ce to escape. Cheng Pu was later appointed as "General of the Household Who Defeats Bandits" (盪寇ä¸éƒŽå°‡) and the Administrator (太守) of Lingling Commandery (零陵郡). He followed Sun Ce in the campaigns against Liu Xun and Huang Zu at Xunyang (尋陽) and Shaxian (沙羨) respectively, before returning to his garrison at Shicheng.[6]
Service under Sun Quan
When Sun Ce died in 200, Cheng Pu, along with Zhang Zhao and others, pledged allegiance to Sun Quan (Sun Ce's younger brother) and travelled around Sun Quan's territories to attack those who refused to submit to the new lord. Under Sun Quan, Cheng Pu fought at the Battle of Jiangxia in 208 and aided in the conquest of Le'an (樂安) when he passed by Yuzhang (è±«ç« ). He later replaced Taishi Ci as the commander of a garrison at Haihun (æµ·æ˜). During the Battle of Red Cliffs of 208-209, Cheng Pu and Zhou Yu served as the Left and Right Commanders of Sun Quan's army respectively, and scored a major victory in the battle against Cao Cao's forces. Cheng Pu and Zhou Yu also led Sun Quan's forces in the subsequent Battle of Jiangling, a follow-up to the Battle of Red Cliffs, and defeated Cao Cao's general Cao Ren. After those battles, Cheng Pu was promoted to Major-General (裨將è») and he served as the Administrator (太守) of Jiangxia Commandery (江å¤éƒ¡), with the commandery capital at Shaxian County (沙羨縣), and was in charge of four counties.[7]
Cheng Pu was the eldest among all the senior military officers under Sun Quan, so the others often addressed him as "Elder Cheng" (程公) to show their respect towards him. He was also known to be a generous man who enjoyed mingling with the scholar-gentry. When Zhou Yu died, Cheng Pu was assigned to replace him as the Administrator (太守) of Nan Commandery (å—郡). After Sun Quan agreed to allow his ally Liu Bei to temporarily occupy Nan Commandery, Cheng Pu was relocated to Jiangxia Commandery. Cheng Pu was subsequently promoted to "General Who Defeats Bandits" (盪寇將è»). It is not known when he died.[8]
Death
Cheng Pu's biography did not state when he died. However, the Wu Shu (å³æ›¸; Book of Wu), written by Wei Zhao, mentioned that Cheng Pu killed hundreds of traitors and had their bodies were thrown into a fire. He became ill after that incident and died after more than 100 days later.[9]
In 229, after Sun Quan declared himself "Emperor of Eastern Wu", he granted Cheng Pu's son, Cheng Zi (程咨), a marquis title in recognition of Cheng Pu's contributions.[10]
See also
References
- 1 2 The Sanguozhi did not state when Cheng Pu died. However, it is known that he died after 210, the year in which Zhou Yu died. Quote from Sanguozhi vol. 55: (周瑜å’ï¼Œä»£é ˜å—郡太守。權分èŠå·žèˆ‡åŠ‰å‚™ï¼Œæ™®å¾©é‚„é ˜æ±Ÿå¤ï¼Œé·ç›ªå¯‡å°‡è»ï¼Œå’。)
- ↑ de Crespigny, Rafe (2007). A biographical dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms (23–220 AD). Brill. p. 90. ISBN 978-90-04-15605-0.
- ↑ (程普å—德謀,å³åŒ—å¹³åœŸåž äººä¹Ÿã€‚åˆç‚ºå·žéƒ¡å,有容貌計略,善於應å°ã€‚) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (從å«å …å¾ä¼ï¼Œè¨Žé»ƒå·¾æ–¼å®›ã€é„§ï¼Œç ´è‘£å“於陽人,攻城野戰,身被創夷。) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (å …è–¨ï¼Œå¾©éš¨å«ç–在淮å—,從攻廬江,拔之,還俱æ±æ¸¡ã€‚ç–到橫江ã€ç•¶åˆ©ï¼Œç ´å¼µè‹±ã€äºŽéº‹ç‰ï¼Œè½‰ä¸‹ç§£é™µã€æ¹–熟ã€å¥å®¹ã€æ›²é˜¿ï¼Œæ™®çš†æœ‰åŠŸï¼Œå¢žå…µäºŒåƒï¼Œé¨Žäº”ååŒ¹ã€‚é€²ç ´çƒç¨‹ã€çŸ³æœ¨ã€æ³¢é–€ã€é™µå‚³ã€é¤˜æ,普功為多。) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (ç–入會稽,以普為å³éƒ¡éƒ½å°‰ï¼Œæ²»éŒ¢å”。後徙丹楊都尉,居石城。復討宣城ã€æ¶‡ã€å®‰å³ã€é™µé™½ã€æ˜¥ç©€è«¸è³Šï¼Œçš†ç ´ä¹‹ã€‚ç–甞攻祖郎,大為所åœï¼Œæ™®èˆ‡ä¸€é¨Žå…±è”½æ‰žç–,驅馬疾呼,以矛çªè³Šï¼Œè³ŠæŠ«ï¼Œç–å› éš¨å‡ºã€‚å¾Œæ‹œç›ªå¯‡ä¸éƒŽå°‡ï¼Œé ˜é›¶é™µå¤ªå®ˆï¼Œå¾žè¨ŽåŠ‰å‹³æ–¼å°‹é™½ï¼Œé€²æ”»é»ƒç¥–於沙羨,還鎮石城。) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (ç–薨,與張æ˜ç‰å…±è¼”å«æ¬Šï¼Œé‚周旋三郡,平討ä¸æœã€‚åˆå¾žå¾æ±Ÿå¤ï¼Œé‚„éŽè±«ç« ,別討樂安。樂安平定,代太å²æ…ˆå‚™æµ·æ˜ï¼Œèˆ‡å‘¨ç‘œç‚ºå·¦å³ç£ï¼Œç ´æ›¹å…¬æ–¼çƒæž—,åˆé€²æ”»å—郡,走曹ä»ã€‚拜裨將è»ï¼Œé ˜æ±Ÿå¤å¤ªå®ˆï¼Œæ²»æ²™ç¾¨ï¼Œé£Ÿå››ç¸£ã€‚) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (先出諸將,普最年長,時人皆呼程公。性好施與,喜士大夫。周瑜å’ï¼Œä»£é ˜å—郡太守。權分èŠå·žèˆ‡åŠ‰å‚™ï¼Œæ™®å¾©é‚„é ˜æ±Ÿå¤ï¼Œé·ç›ªå¯‡å°‡è»ï¼Œå’。) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (å³æ›¸æ›°ï¼šæ™®æ®ºå›è€…數百人,皆使投ç«ï¼Œå³æ—¥ç—…癘,百餘日å’。) Wu Shu annotation in Sanguozhi vol. 55.
- ↑ (權稱尊號,追論普功,å°å咨為äºä¾¯ã€‚) Sanguozhi vol. 55.
Sources
- Chen Shou. Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi).
- Pei Songzhi. Annotations to Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi zhu).