Empress Teng Fanglan
Empress Teng | |
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Empress of Eastern Wu | |
Born | (Unknown) |
Died | (Unknown) |
Names | |
Traditional Chinese | æ»•çš‡åŽ |
Simplified Chinese | æ»•çš‡åŽ |
Pinyin | Téng Huánghòu |
Wade–Giles | T'eng Huang-hou |
Other names | Teng Fanglan (traditional Chinese: 滕芳è˜; simplified Chinese: 滕芳兰; pinyin: Téng FÄnglán; Wade–Giles: T'eng Fang-lan) |
Empress Teng (birth and death dates unknown), personal name Teng Fanglan,[1] was an empress of the state of Eastern Wu during the Three Kingdoms period. She was married to Sun Hao, the fourth and last emperor of Wu.
Life
Lady Teng was the daughter of Teng Mu (滕牧) and a distant relative of Teng Yin, a high ranking minister in Wu. When Teng Yin was killed in a failed attempt to overthrow the Wu regent Sun Chen in 256, Teng Mu and his family were exiled to the border. However, after Sun Xiu ascended the throne in 258 and eliminated Sun Chen, he granted amnesty to those who were condemned by Sun Chen, so Teng Mu and his family were allowed to return to the Wu capital Jianye (建æ¥; present-day Nanjing, Jiangsu). Teng Mu became a zhonglang (ä¸éƒŽ; a type of official) in the "Bureau for All Purposes" (五官曹). When Sun Hao was enfeoffed as the "Marquis of Wucheng" (çƒç¨‹ä¾¯), he took Lady Teng as his concubine and instated her as the empress later when he ascended the throne in 264. He enfeoffed Teng Mu as the "Marquis of Gaomi" (高密侯), appointed him as the "General of the Guards" (衞將è») and granted him authority over the Imperial Secretariat (尚書).[2]
Sun Hao turned out to be a cruel and superstitious tyrant. His subjects were hesitant in attempting to persuade him to mend his ways, but due to Teng Mu's honoured status, they often asked Teng to help them present their proposals to Sun Hao because the emperor might be offended if they gave him advice directly. Sun Hao eventually grew tired of Teng Mu's suggestions and Empress Teng fell out of her husband's favour as a consequence. In 266, Sun Hao suddenly ordered Teng Mu to move to Cangwu (蒼梧; in present-day Wuzhou, Guangxi) — effectively sending the latter into exile — even though he did not strip the latter of his titles. Teng Mu died of distress on the journey to Cangwu. Sun Hao considered deposing Empress Teng as well but his superstitious beliefs worked in the empress's favour — his sorcerers (whom he trusted) told him that replacing the empress would lead to disaster for him. Sun Hao's mother, Empress Dowager He, also intervened by protecting and speaking up for Empress Teng. Empress Teng lived with her mother-in-law and rarely saw Sun Hao again but retained her authority as the empress. At the same time, Sun Hao gave empress signets to many of his other concubines.[3]
Little else is known about Empress Teng. When Wu was conquered by forces of the Jin Dynasty in 280, she accompanied Sun Hao to the Jin capital Luoyang. It is not known what happened to her after that.[4]
Empress Teng's 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 "Fanglan", hence she was also known as "Teng Fanglan".[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 (追諡父和為文皇å¸ï¼Œã€€... 立夫人滕æ°ç‚ºçš‡åŽã€‚åŽè«±èгè˜ï¼Œå¤ªå¸¸æ»•胤æ—女。) Jiankang Shilu vol. 4.
- ↑ (å«ç𓿻•夫人,故太常胤之æ—女也。胤夷滅,夫人父牧,以踈é 徙邊郡。å«ä¼‘å³ä½ï¼Œå¤§èµ¦ï¼Œå¾—還,以牧為五官ä¸éƒŽã€‚皓旣å°çƒç¨‹ä¾¯ï¼Œè˜ç‰§å¥³ç‚ºå¦ƒã€‚çš“å³ä½ï¼Œç«‹ç‚ºçš‡åŽï¼Œå°ç‰§é«˜å¯†ä¾¯ï¼Œæ‹œè¡žå°‡è»ï¼ŒéŒ„尚書事。) Sanguozhi vol. 50.
- ↑ (後æœå£«ä»¥ç‰§å°Šæˆšï¼Œé —推令諫çˆã€‚è€Œå¤«äººå¯µæ¼¸è¡°ï¼Œçš“æ»‹ä¸æ±ï¼Œç𓿝何æ’å·¦å³ä¹‹ã€‚åˆå¤ªå²è¨€ï¼Œæ–¼é‹æ·ï¼ŒåŽä¸å¯æ˜“,皓信巫覡,故得ä¸å»¢ï¼Œå¸¸ä¾›é¤Šå‡å¹³å®®ã€‚牧見é£å±…蒼梧郡,雖爵ä½ä¸å¥ªï¼Œå…¶å¯¦è£”也,é‚é“路憂æ»ã€‚é•·ç§‹å®˜åƒšå‚™å“¡è€Œå·²ï¼Œå—æœè³€è¡¨ç–如故。而皓內諸寵姬,佩皇åŽç’½ç´±è€…多矣。) Sanguozhi vol. 50.
- ↑ (天紀四年,隨皓é·äºŽæ´›é™½ã€‚) Sanguozhi vol. 50.
- Chen, Shou. Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi).
- Sima, Guang. Zizhi Tongjian vols. 78-79.
- Xu, Song (許嵩). Jiankang Shilu (建康實錄; True Records of Jiankang).
Chinese royalty | ||
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Preceded by Empress Zhu |
Empress of Eastern Wu 264 – 280 |
Dynasty ended |
Empress of China (Southeastern) 264 – 280 |
Succeeded by Empress Yang Zhi of Jin |
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