Later Zhao
From Academic Kids
| This article is part of the Sixteen Kingdoms series. | |
|---|---|
| 16 Kingdoms | |
| Cheng Han | |
| Han Zhao | |
| Later Zhao | |
| Former Liang | |
| Later Liang | |
| Western Liang | |
| Northern Liang | |
| Southern Liang | |
| Former Qin | |
| Later Qin | |
| Western Qin | |
| Former Yan | |
| Later Yan | |
| Northern Yan | |
| Southern Yan | |
| Xia | |
| Not included in 16 Kingdoms | |
| Wei | |
| Shu | |
| Western Yan | |
| Duan | |
| Yuwen | |
| Chouchi | |
| Dingling |
The Later Zhao (Simplified Chinese character: 后赵, Traditional Chinese character: 後趙, Hanyu pinyin Hòuzhào) (319-351) was a state of the Sixteen Kingdoms during the Jin Dynasty (265-420) in China. It was founded by the Shi family of the Jie ethnicity. The Later Zhao was the second in territories to the Former Qin that once unified Northern China under Fu Jian.
[edit]
Rulers of the Later Zhao
| Temple names | Posthumous names | Family names and given name | Durations of reigns | Era names and their according durations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese convention: use family and given names | ||||
| Gaozu (高祖 Gāozǔ) | Ming (明 míng) | Shi Le (石勒 Shí Lè) | 319-333 | Zhaowang (趙王 Zhàowáng) 319-328Taihe (太和 Tàihé) 328-330 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Haiyang (海陽王 Hǎiyáng wáng) | Shi Hong (石弘 Shí hong2) | 333-334 | Yanxi (延熙 Yánxī) 334 |
| Taizu (太祖 Tàizǔ) | Wu (武 Wǔ) | Shi Hu (石虎 Shí Hǔ) | 334-349 | Jianwu (建武 Jiànwǔ) 335-349Taining (太寧 Tàiníng) 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Qiao (譙王 Qiáo wáng) | Shi Shi (石世 Shí Shì) | 73 days in 349 | Taining (太寧 Tàiníng) 73 days in 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Pangcheng (彭城王 Pángchéng wáng) | Shi Zun (石遵 Shí Zūn) | 183 days in 349 | Taining (太寧 Tàiníng) 183 days in 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Yiyang (義陽王 Yìyáng wáng) | Shi Jian (石鑒 Shí Jiàn) | 103 days within 349-350 | Qinglong (青龍 Qīnglóng) 103 days within 349-350 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Xinxing (新興王 Xīnxīng wáng) | Shi Zhi (石祗 Shí Zhī) | 350-351 | Yongning (永寧 Yǒngníng) 349-350 |
[edit]
Related Topics
- Jie
- List of past Chinese ethnic groups
- Wu Hu
- Sixteen Kingdoms
- Yechongji (literary meaning: Records within Ye)
- Buddhism in China
- Fo Tu Teng
- Memoirs of Eminent Monks
- Ran Min
- genocide
