Wei (Dingling)
Wei | ||||||||||
魏 | ||||||||||
Kingdom | ||||||||||
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Capital | Huatai | |||||||||
Government | Monarchy | |||||||||
Tian Wang | ||||||||||
• | 388-391 | Zhai Liao | ||||||||
• | 391-392 | Zhai Zhao | ||||||||
Historical era | Sixteen Kingdoms | |||||||||
• | Zhai Liao's last break with Later Yan | 387 | ||||||||
• | Established | 388 | ||||||||
• | Disestablished | 392 | ||||||||
• | Zhai Zhao's execution by Western Yan | 393 | ||||||||
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Wei (Chinese: 魏; pinyin: Wèi) was a state of Dingling ethnicity that existed from 388 to 392, during the Sixteen Kingdoms period of Chinese history. It is often referred to as Zhai Wei to be distinguished from numerous other states named Wei in history. Its founder Zhai Liao had previously been vacillating between being a vassal of Later Yan, Western Yan, and Jin dynasty, and in 388, after his last overture to reconcile with Later Yan's emperor Murong Chui was rejected, he declared his own state, over the territory of modern central and eastern Henan. In 392, Wei, then under Zhai Liao's son Zhai Zhao, was destroyed by Later Yan forces. Because of its relatively small size and short lifespan, Wei is generally not included by historians among the Sixteen Kingdoms.
The rulers of Wei used the title "Heavenly King" (Tian Wang).
Rulers of Wei
Temple names | Posthumous names | Family names and given name | Durations of reigns | Era names and their according durations |
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None | None | Zhai Liao (翟遼 zhái liáo) | 388-391 | Jianguang (建光 jiàn guāng) 388-391 |
None | None | Zhai Zhao (翟釗 zhái zhāo) | 391-392 | Dingding (定鼎 dìng dǐng) 391-392 |
See also
References
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- Historical Dictionary of Medieval China, p. 119, at Google Books
- Former monarchies of Asia
- Former countries in East Asia
- States and territories established in 388
- States and territories disestablished in the 4th century
- Pages using infobox former country with unknown parameters
- Articles containing Chinese-language text
- Wei (Dingling)
- 388 establishments
- 392 disestablishments