Difference between revisions of "Emperor Xuanzong of Tang China" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{dablink|This article is about the well-known seventh emperor of Tang Dynasty. For his descendant whose temple name is also rendered Xuanzong in [[pinyin]], see [[Emperor Xuānzong of Tang]].}}
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{{dablink|This article is about the well-known seventh emperor of Tang Dynasty. For his descendant whose temple name is also rendered Xuanzong in [[pinyin]], see [[Emperor Xuānzong of Tang]].}}
 
 
 
{{Chinese_Emperor_1 |
 
{{Chinese_Emperor_1 |
   image_name=[[Image:Tang_XianZong.jpg|center|200px]]|birth=[[8 September]], [[685]]|death=May 3, [[762]]|family_name=Lǐ (李)|posthumous_name_full=Emperor Zhidao Dasheng<br>
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   image_name=[[Image:Tang_XianZong.jpg|center|200px]]|birth=8 September, 685|death=May 3, 762|family_name=Lǐ (李)|posthumous_name_full=Emperor Zhidao Dasheng<br/>
Daming Xiao<br>
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Daming Xiao<br/>
 
至道大聖大明孝皇帝|
 
至道大聖大明孝皇帝|
   begin_reign=[[8 September]], [[712]]¹|
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   begin_reign=September 8, 712¹|
   end_reign=[[12 August]], [[756]]²|
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   end_reign=August 12, 756²|
 
   dynasty=[[Tang]] (唐)|
 
   dynasty=[[Tang]] (唐)|
 
   given_name=Longji (隆基)|
 
   given_name=Longji (隆基)|
 
   temple_name=Xuánzōng (玄宗)|
 
   temple_name=Xuánzōng (玄宗)|
 
   posthumous_name_short=Emperor Ming³ (明皇)|
 
   posthumous_name_short=Emperor Ming³ (明皇)|
   notes=''General note: Dates given here are in the [[Julian calendar]]''.<br>
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   notes=''General note: Dates given here are in the [[Julian calendar]]''.<br/>
''They are not in the [[proleptic Gregorian calendar]]''.<br>———<br>
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''They are not in the [[proleptic Gregorian calendar]]''.<br/>———<br/>
''1. Ascended the throne following the abdication of his father, who''<br>
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''1. Ascended the throne following the abdication of his father, who''<br/>
''received the title [[Taishang Huang]]''</small> (太上皇). <br>
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''received the title [[Taishang Huang]]''</small> (太上皇). <br/>
<small>''In practice, his father continued to rule until the palace coup<br>of [[July 29]], [[713]], and Xuanzong obtained full power from his<br>father on [[July 30]].''<br>  
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<small>''In practice, his father continued to rule until the palace coup<br/>of July 29, 713, and Xuanzong obtained full power from his<br/>father on July 30.''<br/>  
''2. Following the rebellion of [[An Lushan]], Xuanzong's son was<br>proclaimed emperor by the army on [[August 12]], [[756]], but<br>Xuanzong and his retinue, who had escaped to [[Sichuan]], only<br>heard the news on [[September 10]] [[756]], that date marking the<br>end of Xuanzong's reign in practice''.<br>
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''2. Following the rebellion of [[An Lushan]], Xuanzong's son was<br/>proclaimed emperor by the army on August 12, 756, but<br/>Xuanzong and his retinue, who had escaped to [[Sichuan]], only<br/>heard the news on September 10 756, that date marking the<br/>end of Xuanzong's reign in practice''.<br/>
''3. This is the name under which Emperor Xuanzong is most<br>known inside China''</small>.
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''3. This is the name under which Emperor Xuanzong is most<br/>known inside China''</small>.
 
}}
 
}}
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'''Emperor Tang Xuanzong''' ({{zh-c|c=唐玄宗}}Hsuan Tsung. Pinyin  Xuan Zong (temple name), personal name (Wade–Giles romanization) Li Lung-chi, posthumous name, or shih, Ming Huang, or Wu Huang) (September 8, 685 - May 3, 762), born '''Li Longji''' (李隆基), was the sixth [[emperor]] of the [[Tang dynasty]] in [[China]], reigning from 712 to 756. Xuanzong (Hsüan Tsung) was the third son of Jui Tsung, who was himself a son of the empress Wu Hou (Zetian 武則天). His 44-year reign was the longest during the Tang Dynasty. During the early part of his rule, the Tang reached the height of its power. Ruling with the help of capable officials, Xuanzong reformed the bureaucracy and made it more efficient and conducted a registration of all citizens which led to large increase in tax revenues and financial stability for the government. Xuanzong installed competent officials, such as [[Zhang Jiuling]] (張九齡) as prime minister, who helped the country grow economically. The [[Grand Canal of China|Grand Canal]] system in the capital at Ch'ang-an, which had fallen into decay during Empress Wu Zetian( 武則天)'s reign, was repaired. Xuanzong established music academies and patronized artists and writers, including several famous poets. Tang armies restored Chinese dominion over Central Asia.
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{{toc}}
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During the later part of his reign, Xuanzong (Hsüan-tsung)’s legendary infatuation with his concubine [[Yang Guifei]] ( 楊貴妃,Yang Kuei-fei) was blamed for demoralizing the T’ang court and opening the way for the military rebellion of An Lu-shan. (安史之亂; Ān Shǐ Zhīluàn).
  
'''Emperor Tang Xuanzong''' ({{zh-c|c=唐玄宗}}) ([[September 8]], [[685]] - [[May 3]], [[762]]), born '''Li Longji''' (李隆基), was the sixth [[emperor]] of the [[Tang dynasty]] in [[China]], reigning from [[712]] to [[756]]. His reign was the longest during the Tang Dynasty, and he was credited with bringing Tang Dynasty China to a pinnacle of culture and power. His later reign was affected by the influence of [[Yang Guifei]], one of his consorts, and was ultimately terminated by a great and disastrous [[An Shi Rebellion|military rebellion]].
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==Accession to the Throne==
  
==Accession to the throne==
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Xuanzong (Hsüan Tsung) was born September 8, 685, the third son of Jui Tsung (fifth emperor of the T'ang dynasty, (temple name, or ''miao-hao'', Rui Zong, 睿宗; personal name ''(hsing-ming)'', Li Tan), who was himself a son of the empress Wu Hou (Zetian武則天). Xuanzong  was born in an era when power was almost entirely in the hands of his grandmother, the [[Empress Wu Zetian]]( 武則天, Wu Hou, Wu Chao, also called Wu Tse-t'ien). Originally a concubine of the Emperor Taizong and then of his son Gaozong, she eliminated all her rivals and eventually enthroned herself in 690 as Emperor Shengshen of China, proclaiming the establishment of the Zhou dynasty, named after her father’s nominal fief and the ancient Zhou dynasty, from which she claimed her Wu family ancestors were descended. Xuanzong became the only hope for the restoration of the imperial Li family of his grandfather’s lineage. His aunt, the [[Princess Taiping]] (太平公主) fiercely guarded Xuanzong from harm and was credited with protecting young Xuanzong from the Wu family.
Born into an era when power was virtually in the hands of his grandmother, the [[Empress Wu Zetian]], Xuanzong became the only glimmer of hope for the restoration of the imperial Li family. His aunt, the [[Princess Taiping]] fiercely protected Xuanzong from harm and was credited with taking care of young Xuanzong from the Wu family.
 
In [[710]] Xuanzong conspired with Princess Taiping (daughter of Empress Wu Zetian) to put an end to Empress Wei's attempted usurpation of power. He killed Empress Wei, the wife of his recently dead uncle [[Emperor Zhongzong]], in a palace coup which placed his own father, [[Emperor Ruizong]], on the throne. He was appointed as [[Chancellor of China|Chancellor]] for a few months before he became the crown prince. Xuanzong then succeeded to the throne in [[712]].
 
  
==Kaiyuan era==
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In 710, Xuanzong conspired with Princess Taiping (daughter of Empress Wu Zetian (武則天)) to put an end to Empress Wei's attempted usurpation of power. He killed Empress Wei, the wife of his recently dead uncle [[Emperor Zhongzong]] (中宗), also a son of Empress Wu, in a palace coup which placed his own father, [[Emperor Ruizong]] (睿宗), on the throne. He was appointed as [[Chancellor of China|Chancellor]] for a few months before he became the crown prince. In 712, the ineffectual Emperor Ruizong abdicated in favour of Xuanzong, but at the urging of his ambitious sister (the princess T'ai-p'ing), he remained “Supreme Emperor,” a regent with the authority to appoint the Princess’ supporters to high offices. Xuanzong succeeded to the throne in 712.
Known also as Tang Minghuang (唐明皇: "the understanding emperor of the Tang"), he began the early half of his reign ([[712]]-[[730]]'s) by raising Tang China to the height of its powers, in a period known popularly as the Kaiyuan era (開元之治). Initially, Xuanzong was a hardworking and diligent emperor.  
 
  
At the beginning of his reign, many of the vassals originally controlled during the [[Taizong]] and early [[Gaozong]]'s reign had rebelled during Wu Zetian's later reign.  These included [[Khitan people|Khitan]]s (the ancestors of the later [[Liao dynasty]]), [[Korea]], the Western and the Eastern [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] (practically all of North Asia and [[Mongolia]]), and the [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]]s, all of whom rose in rebellion. In general, Xuanzong was only left with the central part of China as his Empire.  Furthermore, the [[Silk Road]] was closed off and corruption along it was noticeable (since Wu Zetian's time). Over all, Xuanzong was left with a big mess from Wu Zetian's later reign.  
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In 713, Xuanzong won a brief power struggle with the Princess Taiping (T'ai-p'ing), who then committed suicide. His father retired into seclusion and Xuanzong assumed full authority as emperor.  
  
Luckily, Xuanzong was diligent and wise enough as a leader.  The Tang Army was able to defeat the Khitans, Uyghurs, [[Tibetan people|Tibetan]]s, and Western Turks (although only the latter's land was conquered, while the other three still continued to resist). Notably, the Tang were defeated by the Eastern Turks during the 720s.  However, though Tang lost those battles, the Eastern Turks soon dissolved in internal conflict, so the Tang did not have to do anything. During Xuanzong's reign, the maximum extent of territory included a slightly expanded heartland China, plus the land originally held by the Western Turks all the way to the border of Persia, and a tiny section of land connecting the former Western Turk lands to the heartland; however, this was enough to reopen the Silk Road for economic trade. As to the economy, Xuanzong was able to clean out the corrupt officials left by Wu Zetian. During the Kaiyuan period, Xuanzong installed competent officials (such as [[Zhang Jiuling]] as prime minister) who helped the country grow economically.
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==Kaiyuan Era==
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Known also as "Tang Minghuang" (唐明皇: "the understanding emperor of the Tang"), Xuanzong began the early half of his reign (712-730s) by raising Tang China to the height of its powers, during a period known popularly as the Kaiyuan era (開元之治). Initially, Xuanzong was a hardworking and diligent emperor. He conducted a widespread reform of the [[bureaucracy]], which had become swollen with nominal officials, many of whom had bought their posts or  acquired them by nepotism. The efficiency of the bureaucracy and the authority of the throne were restored, and state finances were once more placed on a stable footing. Xuanzong installed competent officials, such as [[Zhang Jiuling]] (張九齡) as prime minister, who helped the country grow economically. A census was taken and the whole population was registered, resulting in higher tax revenues. The [[Grand Canal of China|Grand Canal]] system in the capital at Ch'ang-an, which had fallen into decay during Empress Wu Zetian( 武則天)'s reign, was once again made operational.  
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Many of the vassals originally under the dominion of the [[Taizong]] (太宗) and early [[Gaozong]] (高宗) Emperors had rebelled during Empress Wu Zetian (武則天)'s later reign. These included [[Khitan people|Khitan]]s (契丹) (the ancestors of the later [[Liao dynasty]] (遼朝), [[Korea]], the Western and the Eastern [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] (practically all of North Asia and [[Mongolia]]), and the [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]]s ( 維吾爾). Xuanzong was left with only the central part of China as his Empire. The [[Silk Road]] had been cut off and corruption along it was noticeable. The Tang Army waged successful campaigns against the Khitans, Uyghurs, [[Tibetan people|Tibetan]]s, and Western Turks (although only the Turks’ land was conquered, while the other three still continued to resist). The Tang were defeated by the Eastern Turks during the 720s, but the Eastern Turks soon dissolved in internal conflict. During Xuanzong's reign, the Tang ruled over a slightly expanded heartland China, plus the land originally held by the Western Turks all the way to the borders of the Ummayad Empire and later the Abbasid Caliphate, and a tiny section of land connecting the former Western Turk lands to the heartland; this was enough to reopen the Silk Road for economic trade. At its maximum extent, the empire controlled the Pamirs and Kashmir.  
  
He made sweeping reforms to the bureaucracy, employed capable ministers, had contact with foreign ambassadors as far west as the [[Middle East]], and greatly expanded China's borders to the borders of the Ummayad Empire and later the Abbasid Caliphate. The maximum extent of the empire controlled the Pamirs and Kashmir.
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Though Korea was not a vassal state, the Tang entered into a cooperative relationship with the [[Unified Silla]] (統一新羅) state on the Korean peninsula, then under the rule of King [[Seongdeok of Silla|Seongdeok]]( 聖德王). Xuanzong saw in Silla a valuable ally on its flank, particularly against the growing power of the state of Bohai ([[Balhae]]( 振, then 渤海)), which in 733 had launched a seaborne attack on Dengzhou in [[Shandong]]( 山東). Tang Xuanzong decided that it would be wiser to make Unified Silla an ally rather than a vassal, because the Tang army was waging a war on its Northern and Western fronts with the nomadic people and Tibetans.  
  
In general, the Tang kept up good relations with Korea though they were not vassals.  This period witnessed the nurturing of a cooperative relationship with the [[Unified Silla]] state on the Korean peninsula, then under the rule of King [[Seongdeok of Silla|Seongdeok]]. Xuanzong saw in Silla a valuable ally on its flank, particularly against the growing power of the state of Bohai ([[Balhae]]), which in [[733]] had actually launched a seaborne attack on Dengzhou in [[Shandong]]. Tang Xuanzong decided that it would be wiser to make Unified Silla as an ally rather than vassal because the Tang army was having it's own war in the Northern and Western front with the nomadic people and Tibetans.  
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Since the 670s, when the vassals started rebelling, the Fu Bing military system had declined considerably. Xuanzong decided to use the ''Jie Du Shi'' system, allowing military leaders to control their own soldiers. While this system was at first successful, it placed control of the military outside the hands of the emperor, and doubled or tripled the previous military expenses.  
  
Xuanzong also made progress on the empire's financial system by effectively registering the whole population, resulting in higher tax revenues.  He also repaired the [[Grand Canal of China|Grand Canal]] system, which has fallen into disrepair during Wu Zetian's reign.  
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Chinese arts and literature, also reached a zenith during Xuanzong’s reign. Xuanzong founded imperial music academies to train court musicians, and patronized painters, writers, and famous poets such as [[Li Bai]] ( 李白), [[Du Fu]] (杜甫) and [[Meng Haoran]] ( 孟浩然), who created some of the most elegant poems since the [[Han dynasty]] ( 漢朝).
  
Since the Fu Bing military system was considerably declined starting from the 670s (when the vassals started rebelling), Xuanzong decided on the Jie Du Shi system where military leaders would control their own soldiers. While this system seemed to be the solution at first as it was successful, it created two problems. One was the control of the military outside the emperor's hand and two was the military expense that doubled to tripled from before.  
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==Later Years (mostly the Tian Bao Era)==
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[[Image:Meister des Tributpferdes 001.jpg|thumb|right|280px|''A Tributary Horse for Emperor Xuanzong'', painted in the 12th century during the [[Song Dynasty]].]]
  
Other areas, such as Chinese arts and literature, also reached a zenith during his reign, with famous poets such as [[Li Bai]], [[Du Fu]] and [[Meng Haoran]], who created some of the most elegant poems since the [[Han dynasty]].
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Until about 721, Xuanzong successfully maintained a balance of power among the [[Confucianism|Confucian]] officials who had served under Empress Wu, members of the imperial clan, and palace officials and imperial consorts. During the 720s, changes in the structure of the government began to concentrate power in the hands of the central administrators. There was simultaneously a resurgence in the influence of the old court aristocracy, and a continual tension arose between the aristocracy and the professional bureaucrats who had been recruited through the civil service examinations. The new census greatly enlarged the numbers of taxpayers, and increased government revenue. The system of transportation was reformed so that the Emperor was no longer obliged to move the court between Ch'ang-an and Lo-yang to avoid periodic famines. Without overburdening the population, Xuanzong was able to establish a permanent military presence along the northern frontiers which numbered 600,000 men by the end of his reign.
  
The emperor became famous, amongst other things, as a patron of the arts and for his notorious love affair with [[Yang Guifei]]. She was the young wife of his son Prince Shou (壽王), but he decreed their divorce and then entered her into a [[Taoist]] [[nunnery]] for a couple of years so that he could take her as his palace [[Imperial consorts of Tang China|consort]] without shame. He rebuilt the ancient hot springs palace at the foot of [[Lishan Mountain]] for his consort and her sisters, naming it [[Huaqing Palace]].
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Xuanzong became increasingly withdrawn from public life and became deeply involved in the study of [[Daoism]]. From the early 720s until her death in 737, he fell under the influence of his consort Wu Hui-fei, who played a part in the rise to power of the administrator Li Lin-fu, and eventually attempted unsuccessfully to make her own eldest son heir to the throne. The emperor then became involved in a love affair with [[Yang Guifei]] (楊貴妃). She was the young wife of his son Prince Shou (壽王), but he decreed their divorce and then entered her into a [[Taoist]] [[nunnery]] for a short time so that he could take her as his palace [[Imperial consorts of Tang China|consort]] without shame. Xuanzong heaped honors on members of Yang’s family, and rebuilt the ancient hot springs palace at the foot of [[Lishan Mountain]] for his consort and her sisters, naming it [[Huaqing Palace]].
  
==Later years (mostly the Tian Bao Era)==
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As Xuanzong turned his attention to pleasure-seeking with Yang and her family, he paid less and less attention to the running of his empire, and much of his power fell into the hands of court officials like the corrupt but competent chief minister [[Li Linfu]] (李林甫) (who was succeeded by Lady Yang's dissolute cousin [[Yang Guozhong]]( 楊國忠)) and the influential court eunuch [[Gao Lishi]] (高力士). The political influence of the old [[aristocracy]] increased, and after 737, Li Lin-fu became a virtual dictator. From 740, the Emperor had less and less control of government affairs.
[[Image:Meister des Tributpferdes 001.jpg|thumb|right|240px|''A Tributary Horse for Emperor Xuanzong'', painted in the 12th century during the [[Song Dynasty]].]]
 
As Xuanzong turned his attention to pleasure-seeking with Yang and her family, he paid less and less attention to the running of his empire, and much of his power fell into the hands of court officials like the corrupt but competent [[Li Linfu]] (who was succeeded by Lady Yang's dissolute cousin [[Yang Guozhong]]) and the influential court eunuch [[Gao Lishi]].
 
  
During one time, when Xuanzong asked Li Linfu to find more intelligent officials to work for the government, Li Linfu went out and look. When Li Linfu came back, he said that there are no more talents out there and that the emperor has already taken in all the talent the country has to offer. Tang Xuanzong believing in his brilliance thought Li Linfu was correct. A similar scenario happened to Tang Taizong in the late 620s. When Tang Taizong asked Feng Diyi to find talents, Fend Diyi gave a response similar to Li Linfu; however, contrary to Xuanzong, Taizong believed Feng Diyi didn't look hard enough and said that it was the government's responsibility to find the talented people.
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On one occasion, Xuanzong sent Li Linfu to find more intelligent officials to work for the government. When Li Linfu came back and informed him that the emperor had already recruited all the talented individuals in the country, Xuanzong, convinced of Lin Fu’s  brilliance, believed him. (A parallel anecdote is reported of Tang Taizong in the late 620s. When Tang Taizong asked Feng Diyi to find talents, he received a report similar to that of Li Linfu; however, Taizong believed that Feng Diyi had ot serched seriously enough, and declared that it was the government's responsibility to find the talented people.)
  
At the same time, [[751]] saw the loss of the critical [[Battle of Talas]] against the Arab Abbasid Empire. As a consequence, the Tang lost some of its influence in Central Asia to the emerging Abbasid Caliphate. In general, the country started to decline after this major turning point battle.   
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In 751, the Tang lost the critical [[Battle of Talas]], fought  against the Arab Abbasid Empire over control of the Syr Darya. As a consequence, the Tang lost some of its influence in Central Asia to the emerging Abbasid Caliphate. This battle marked an important turning point, after which the country began to decline.  
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After 737, the ''Jie Du Shi'' (generals) of the outlying provinces, many of which had been recently reconquered, took more and more regional power into their own hands. Some successful generals included Geshu Han, who defeated the Tibets; Gao Xianzhi who conquered to the borders of Persia; and [[An Lu Shan]], who defeated and once again vassalized the Khitans. During the early part of Xuanzong's reign, most ''Jie Du Shi'' had been of Han ethnicity, but when Li Linfu became chief minister, he installed foreign ''Jie Du Shi'' like An Lu Shan, who had 180,000 troops under his control in the northeast, knowing that they would be less likely to present a challenge to his authority. By the late 740s, some of these generals had become very powerful and begun to intervene in court politics. The central government had no standing army of its own to rival the forces of the Jie Du Shi.
  
Meanwhile, ''Jie Du Shi'' (generals) of the outlying provinces, many of which had been recently reconquered, took more and more regional power into their own hands. Some successful generals include Geshu Han who normally defeated the Tibets, Gao Xianzhi would conquered to the borders of Persia, and An Lu Shan who defeated and once again vassalized the Khitans. During the early part of Xuanzong's reign, most Jie Du Shi were of Han ethnic, but when Li Linfu took over, he installed foreign Jie Du Shi like An Lu Shan. This was because Jie Du Shi could potentially challenge the prime minister's position in the future when generals decide to politically work for the government. Since people of foreign ethnic is less likely to get a large official position in the government, Li Linfu wouldn't have to worry about future generals going against him. Eventually, a Turkish/Sogdian named [[An Lushan]] started the [[An Lushan Rebellion]] in [[Fanyang]] in [[755]]. The rebels quickly captured the city of [[Luoyang]], and then the imperial capital [[Chang'an]] six months later.  
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==An Lushan Rebellion==
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After the death of Li Linfu, tensions arose between his successor, Yang Kuo-chung, and, the Turkish/Sogdian general [[An Lushan]]( 安祿山). At the end of 755, An Lushan( 安祿山) started the [[An Lushan Rebellion]] ( 安史之亂) in [[Fanyang]] ( 范陽). An Lu-shan's forces moved into the northeastern provinces, and, by the summer of 756, they were approaching the imperial capital of [[Chang'an]] (長安). Xuanzong, accompanied only by a few troops and a small group of relatives and courtiers, fled to take refuge in [[Sichuan]] ( 四川), the headquarters of the Yang clan. They had reached Ma-wei when the Imperial bodyguard mutinied and killed Yang Guozhong (楊國忠) and Yang Guifei for their perceived part in the Emperor's downfall.
  
Xuanzong fled to [[Sichuan]] during the war, and Yang Guifei and Yang Guozhong, who attempted to flee with him, were killed by the Imperial bodyguard for their perceived part in the Emperor's weakness and loss of control.
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==Abdication and Death==
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Soon afterward, the heir apparent, who had escaped to Lingwu, declared himself [[Emperor Suzong of Tang|Suzong]]( (肅宗). Xuanzong heard of this several weeks later and abdicated his position. He was put under house arrest in 760 in his own palace by his son and [[Li Fuguo]] (李輔國). Still mourning for his lost Lady Yang, he died in 762 shortly before the rebellion was finally quashed. His rule was the longest of the Tang dynasty, lasting nearly 44 years.  
  
==Abdication and death==
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Although Hsüan Tsung's reign ended in political disaster and personal tragedy, it was a period of internal stability, good government, and prosperity, an era of confidence during which real progress was made in every field. The sudden end of this period not only changed the political system completely but it was also a dramatic, traumatic experience for the men of the time. In the next decade, the confident pride of Hsüan Tsung's age was replaced by self-questioning, by withdrawal from public affairs, and by a new spirit of social and political criticism.
Xuanzong abdicated his position to [[Emperor Suzong of Tang|Suzong]], the heir apparent, in [[756]]. He was put under house arrest in [[760]] in his own palace by his son and [[Li Fuguo]].  Still mourning for his lost Lady Yang, he died in 762 shortly before the rebellion was finally quashed. His rule was the longest of the Tang dynasty, lasting nearly 44 years.  
 
  
He was deeply criticized by later historians, even during his own [[Tang Dynasty]], for corruption and his appointment of [[Li Linfu]] to the chancellorship. On the other side, [[Mao Zedong]] said that Xuanzong was "half bright, half dark"(一半明一半暗). The strength that Xuanzong had allowed the warlords in the border provinces (''[[Fanzhen]]'') led to a period of increasing conflict and instability which set the stage for the end of the Tang Dynasty and the ensuing [[Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period]].
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==Legacy==
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Xuanzong was criticized by later historians, even during his own [[Tang Dynasty]], for corruption and for his appointment of [[Li Linfu]] (李林甫) to the chancellorship. However, his reign was a period of internal stability, good government and prosperity. The sudden end of his reign during the An Lushan rebellion was traumatic for all of China and was immediately followed by a period of social and political criticism. [[Mao Zedong]] once commented that Xuanzong was "half bright, half dark" (一半明一半暗). The strength that Xuanzong had allowed the warlords in the border provinces ''([[Fanzhen]])'' led to a period of increasing conflict and instability which set the stage for the end of the Tang Dynasty and the ensuing [[Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period]] ( 五代十國).
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
*minister [[Zhang Jiuling]]
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*minister [[Zhang Jiuling]] (張九齡)
*artist [[Wu Tao-Tzu]]
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*artist [[Wu Tao-Tzu]] (吳道子)
*royalty [[Princess Taiping]]
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*royalty [[Princess Taiping]] (太平公主)
 
 
{{start box}}
 
{{succession box | before = [[Li Jiao]] | title = [[Chancellor of China]]| years = [[710]] | after =[[Song Jing]]}}
 
{{succession box | before = [[Emperor Ruizong of Tang|Emperor Ruizong]] | title = [[Tang Dynasty|Emperor of Tang]]| years = [[712]]&ndash;[[756]] | after = [[Emperor Suzong of Tang|Emperor Suzong]] }}
 
{{end box}}
 
  
[[Category:Tang Dynasty emperors|Xuanzong of Tang]]
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==References==
[[Category:685 births|Xuanzong of Tang]]
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*Grousset, René. 1970. ''The empire of the steppes; a history of central Asia''. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0813506271 ISBN 9780813506272
[[Category:762 deaths|Xuanzong of Tang]]
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*Owen, Stephen. 1996. ''An anthology of Chinese literature: beginnings to 1911''. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0393038238 ISBN 9780393038231
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*Tang Xuanzong. 1968. ''Da Tang liu dian''. Taibei: Wen hai chu ban she.
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*Twitchett, Denis Crispin, and Fairbank, John King. 1978. ''The Cambridge history of China''. Cambridge England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521214475 ISBN 9780521214476 ISBN 0521243270 ISBN 9780521243278 ISBN 0521243335 ISBN 9780521243339 ISBN 0521220297 ISBN 9780521220293
  
[[de:Tang Xuanzong]]
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Latest revision as of 15:41, 7 September 2017

Tang XianZong.jpg
Emperor Xuanzong of Tang China
Birth and death: 8 September, 685–May 3, 762
Family name: Lǐ (李)
Given name: Longji (隆基)
Dates of reign: September 8, 712¹–August 12, 756²
Temple name: Xuánzōng (玄宗)
Posthumous name:
(short)
Emperor Ming³ (明皇)
Posthumous name:
(full)
Emperor Zhidao Dasheng

Daming Xiao
至道大聖大明孝皇帝

General note: Dates given here are in the Julian calendar.

They are not in the proleptic Gregorian calendar.
———
1. Ascended the throne following the abdication of his father, who
received the title Taishang Huang
(太上皇).
In practice, his father continued to rule until the palace coup
of July 29, 713, and Xuanzong obtained full power from his
father on July 30.

2. Following the rebellion of An Lushan, Xuanzong's son was
proclaimed emperor by the army on August 12, 756, but
Xuanzong and his retinue, who had escaped to Sichuan, only
heard the news on September 10 756, that date marking the
end of Xuanzong's reign in practice
.
3. This is the name under which Emperor Xuanzong is most
known inside China
.

Emperor Tang Xuanzong (Chinese: 唐玄宗Hsuan Tsung. Pinyin Xuan Zong (temple name), personal name (Wade–Giles romanization) Li Lung-chi, posthumous name, or shih, Ming Huang, or Wu Huang) (September 8, 685 - May 3, 762), born Li Longji (李隆基), was the sixth emperor of the Tang dynasty in China, reigning from 712 to 756. Xuanzong (Hsüan Tsung) was the third son of Jui Tsung, who was himself a son of the empress Wu Hou (Zetian 武則天). His 44-year reign was the longest during the Tang Dynasty. During the early part of his rule, the Tang reached the height of its power. Ruling with the help of capable officials, Xuanzong reformed the bureaucracy and made it more efficient and conducted a registration of all citizens which led to large increase in tax revenues and financial stability for the government. Xuanzong installed competent officials, such as Zhang Jiuling (張九齡) as prime minister, who helped the country grow economically. The Grand Canal system in the capital at Ch'ang-an, which had fallen into decay during Empress Wu Zetian( 武則天)'s reign, was repaired. Xuanzong established music academies and patronized artists and writers, including several famous poets. Tang armies restored Chinese dominion over Central Asia.

During the later part of his reign, Xuanzong (Hsüan-tsung)’s legendary infatuation with his concubine Yang Guifei ( 楊貴妃,Yang Kuei-fei) was blamed for demoralizing the T’ang court and opening the way for the military rebellion of An Lu-shan. (安史之亂; Ān Shǐ Zhīluàn).

Accession to the Throne

Xuanzong (Hsüan Tsung) was born September 8, 685, the third son of Jui Tsung (fifth emperor of the T'ang dynasty, (temple name, or miao-hao, Rui Zong, 睿宗; personal name (hsing-ming), Li Tan), who was himself a son of the empress Wu Hou (Zetian武則天). Xuanzong was born in an era when power was almost entirely in the hands of his grandmother, the Empress Wu Zetian( 武則天, Wu Hou, Wu Chao, also called Wu Tse-t'ien). Originally a concubine of the Emperor Taizong and then of his son Gaozong, she eliminated all her rivals and eventually enthroned herself in 690 as Emperor Shengshen of China, proclaiming the establishment of the Zhou dynasty, named after her father’s nominal fief and the ancient Zhou dynasty, from which she claimed her Wu family ancestors were descended. Xuanzong became the only hope for the restoration of the imperial Li family of his grandfather’s lineage. His aunt, the Princess Taiping (太平公主) fiercely guarded Xuanzong from harm and was credited with protecting young Xuanzong from the Wu family.

In 710, Xuanzong conspired with Princess Taiping (daughter of Empress Wu Zetian (武則天)) to put an end to Empress Wei's attempted usurpation of power. He killed Empress Wei, the wife of his recently dead uncle Emperor Zhongzong (中宗), also a son of Empress Wu, in a palace coup which placed his own father, Emperor Ruizong (睿宗), on the throne. He was appointed as Chancellor for a few months before he became the crown prince. In 712, the ineffectual Emperor Ruizong abdicated in favour of Xuanzong, but at the urging of his ambitious sister (the princess T'ai-p'ing), he remained “Supreme Emperor,” a regent with the authority to appoint the Princess’ supporters to high offices. Xuanzong succeeded to the throne in 712.

In 713, Xuanzong won a brief power struggle with the Princess Taiping (T'ai-p'ing), who then committed suicide. His father retired into seclusion and Xuanzong assumed full authority as emperor.

Kaiyuan Era

Known also as "Tang Minghuang" (唐明皇: "the understanding emperor of the Tang"), Xuanzong began the early half of his reign (712-730s) by raising Tang China to the height of its powers, during a period known popularly as the Kaiyuan era (開元之治). Initially, Xuanzong was a hardworking and diligent emperor. He conducted a widespread reform of the bureaucracy, which had become swollen with nominal officials, many of whom had bought their posts or acquired them by nepotism. The efficiency of the bureaucracy and the authority of the throne were restored, and state finances were once more placed on a stable footing. Xuanzong installed competent officials, such as Zhang Jiuling (張九齡) as prime minister, who helped the country grow economically. A census was taken and the whole population was registered, resulting in higher tax revenues. The Grand Canal system in the capital at Ch'ang-an, which had fallen into decay during Empress Wu Zetian( 武則天)'s reign, was once again made operational.

Many of the vassals originally under the dominion of the Taizong (太宗) and early Gaozong (高宗) Emperors had rebelled during Empress Wu Zetian (武則天)'s later reign. These included Khitans (契丹) (the ancestors of the later Liao dynasty (遼朝), Korea, the Western and the Eastern Turks (practically all of North Asia and Mongolia), and the Uyghurs ( 維吾爾). Xuanzong was left with only the central part of China as his Empire. The Silk Road had been cut off and corruption along it was noticeable. The Tang Army waged successful campaigns against the Khitans, Uyghurs, Tibetans, and Western Turks (although only the Turks’ land was conquered, while the other three still continued to resist). The Tang were defeated by the Eastern Turks during the 720s, but the Eastern Turks soon dissolved in internal conflict. During Xuanzong's reign, the Tang ruled over a slightly expanded heartland China, plus the land originally held by the Western Turks all the way to the borders of the Ummayad Empire and later the Abbasid Caliphate, and a tiny section of land connecting the former Western Turk lands to the heartland; this was enough to reopen the Silk Road for economic trade. At its maximum extent, the empire controlled the Pamirs and Kashmir.

Though Korea was not a vassal state, the Tang entered into a cooperative relationship with the Unified Silla (統一新羅) state on the Korean peninsula, then under the rule of King Seongdeok( 聖德王). Xuanzong saw in Silla a valuable ally on its flank, particularly against the growing power of the state of Bohai (Balhae( 振, then 渤海)), which in 733 had launched a seaborne attack on Dengzhou in Shandong( 山東). Tang Xuanzong decided that it would be wiser to make Unified Silla an ally rather than a vassal, because the Tang army was waging a war on its Northern and Western fronts with the nomadic people and Tibetans.

Since the 670s, when the vassals started rebelling, the Fu Bing military system had declined considerably. Xuanzong decided to use the Jie Du Shi system, allowing military leaders to control their own soldiers. While this system was at first successful, it placed control of the military outside the hands of the emperor, and doubled or tripled the previous military expenses.

Chinese arts and literature, also reached a zenith during Xuanzong’s reign. Xuanzong founded imperial music academies to train court musicians, and patronized painters, writers, and famous poets such as Li Bai ( 李白), Du Fu (杜甫) and Meng Haoran ( 孟浩然), who created some of the most elegant poems since the Han dynasty ( 漢朝).

Later Years (mostly the Tian Bao Era)

A Tributary Horse for Emperor Xuanzong, painted in the 12th century during the Song Dynasty.

Until about 721, Xuanzong successfully maintained a balance of power among the Confucian officials who had served under Empress Wu, members of the imperial clan, and palace officials and imperial consorts. During the 720s, changes in the structure of the government began to concentrate power in the hands of the central administrators. There was simultaneously a resurgence in the influence of the old court aristocracy, and a continual tension arose between the aristocracy and the professional bureaucrats who had been recruited through the civil service examinations. The new census greatly enlarged the numbers of taxpayers, and increased government revenue. The system of transportation was reformed so that the Emperor was no longer obliged to move the court between Ch'ang-an and Lo-yang to avoid periodic famines. Without overburdening the population, Xuanzong was able to establish a permanent military presence along the northern frontiers which numbered 600,000 men by the end of his reign.

Xuanzong became increasingly withdrawn from public life and became deeply involved in the study of Daoism. From the early 720s until her death in 737, he fell under the influence of his consort Wu Hui-fei, who played a part in the rise to power of the administrator Li Lin-fu, and eventually attempted unsuccessfully to make her own eldest son heir to the throne. The emperor then became involved in a love affair with Yang Guifei (楊貴妃). She was the young wife of his son Prince Shou (壽王), but he decreed their divorce and then entered her into a Taoist nunnery for a short time so that he could take her as his palace consort without shame. Xuanzong heaped honors on members of Yang’s family, and rebuilt the ancient hot springs palace at the foot of Lishan Mountain for his consort and her sisters, naming it Huaqing Palace.

As Xuanzong turned his attention to pleasure-seeking with Yang and her family, he paid less and less attention to the running of his empire, and much of his power fell into the hands of court officials like the corrupt but competent chief minister Li Linfu (李林甫) (who was succeeded by Lady Yang's dissolute cousin Yang Guozhong( 楊國忠)) and the influential court eunuch Gao Lishi (高力士). The political influence of the old aristocracy increased, and after 737, Li Lin-fu became a virtual dictator. From 740, the Emperor had less and less control of government affairs.

On one occasion, Xuanzong sent Li Linfu to find more intelligent officials to work for the government. When Li Linfu came back and informed him that the emperor had already recruited all the talented individuals in the country, Xuanzong, convinced of Lin Fu’s brilliance, believed him. (A parallel anecdote is reported of Tang Taizong in the late 620s. When Tang Taizong asked Feng Diyi to find talents, he received a report similar to that of Li Linfu; however, Taizong believed that Feng Diyi had ot serched seriously enough, and declared that it was the government's responsibility to find the talented people.)

In 751, the Tang lost the critical Battle of Talas, fought against the Arab Abbasid Empire over control of the Syr Darya. As a consequence, the Tang lost some of its influence in Central Asia to the emerging Abbasid Caliphate. This battle marked an important turning point, after which the country began to decline.

After 737, the Jie Du Shi (generals) of the outlying provinces, many of which had been recently reconquered, took more and more regional power into their own hands. Some successful generals included Geshu Han, who defeated the Tibets; Gao Xianzhi who conquered to the borders of Persia; and An Lu Shan, who defeated and once again vassalized the Khitans. During the early part of Xuanzong's reign, most Jie Du Shi had been of Han ethnicity, but when Li Linfu became chief minister, he installed foreign Jie Du Shi like An Lu Shan, who had 180,000 troops under his control in the northeast, knowing that they would be less likely to present a challenge to his authority. By the late 740s, some of these generals had become very powerful and begun to intervene in court politics. The central government had no standing army of its own to rival the forces of the Jie Du Shi.

An Lushan Rebellion

After the death of Li Linfu, tensions arose between his successor, Yang Kuo-chung, and, the Turkish/Sogdian general An Lushan( 安祿山). At the end of 755, An Lushan( 安祿山) started the An Lushan Rebellion ( 安史之亂) in Fanyang ( 范陽). An Lu-shan's forces moved into the northeastern provinces, and, by the summer of 756, they were approaching the imperial capital of Chang'an (長安). Xuanzong, accompanied only by a few troops and a small group of relatives and courtiers, fled to take refuge in Sichuan ( 四川), the headquarters of the Yang clan. They had reached Ma-wei when the Imperial bodyguard mutinied and killed Yang Guozhong (楊國忠) and Yang Guifei for their perceived part in the Emperor's downfall.

Abdication and Death

Soon afterward, the heir apparent, who had escaped to Lingwu, declared himself Suzong( (肅宗). Xuanzong heard of this several weeks later and abdicated his position. He was put under house arrest in 760 in his own palace by his son and Li Fuguo (李輔國). Still mourning for his lost Lady Yang, he died in 762 shortly before the rebellion was finally quashed. His rule was the longest of the Tang dynasty, lasting nearly 44 years.

Although Hsüan Tsung's reign ended in political disaster and personal tragedy, it was a period of internal stability, good government, and prosperity, an era of confidence during which real progress was made in every field. The sudden end of this period not only changed the political system completely but it was also a dramatic, traumatic experience for the men of the time. In the next decade, the confident pride of Hsüan Tsung's age was replaced by self-questioning, by withdrawal from public affairs, and by a new spirit of social and political criticism.

Legacy

Xuanzong was criticized by later historians, even during his own Tang Dynasty, for corruption and for his appointment of Li Linfu (李林甫) to the chancellorship. However, his reign was a period of internal stability, good government and prosperity. The sudden end of his reign during the An Lushan rebellion was traumatic for all of China and was immediately followed by a period of social and political criticism. Mao Zedong once commented that Xuanzong was "half bright, half dark" (一半明一半暗). The strength that Xuanzong had allowed the warlords in the border provinces (Fanzhen) led to a period of increasing conflict and instability which set the stage for the end of the Tang Dynasty and the ensuing Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period ( 五代十國).

See also

  • minister Zhang Jiuling (張九齡)
  • artist Wu Tao-Tzu (吳道子)
  • royalty Princess Taiping (太平公主)

References
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Preceded by:
Li Jiao
Chancellor of China
710
Succeeded by:
Song Jing
Preceded by:
Emperor Ruizong
Emperor of Tang
712–756
Succeeded by:
Emperor Suzong

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