An Ruzi
An Ruzi 安孺子 | |||||
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Ruler of Qi | |||||
Reign | 489 BC | ||||
Predecessor | Duke Jing of Qi | ||||
Successor | Duke Dao of Qi | ||||
Died | 489 BC | ||||
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House | House of Jiang | ||||
Father | Duke Jing of Qi | ||||
Mother | Yu Si |
An Ruzi (Chinese: 安孺子; pinyin: Ān Rúzǐ; died 489 BC), also called Yan Ruzi (Chinese: 晏孺子; pinyin: Yàn Rúzǐ), was for a few months in 489 BC ruler of the State of Qi, a major power during the Spring and Autumn period of ancient China. His personal name was Lü Tu (呂荼), ancestral name Jiang (姜), and An Ruzi was his posthumous title, ruzi meaning "little boy". Due to his short reign and young age he was not given the normal ducal title. He was known as Prince Tu before ascending the throne.[1][2]
Designation as Crown Prince[]
Prince Tu was the youngest son of Duke Jing of Qi, and his mother was Duke Jing's favourite concubine Yu Si,[3] who was from the minor state of Chunyu.[2] In the summer of 490 BC, the 58th year of Duke Jing's reign, the crown prince of Qi died. Although Duke Jing had at least five other grown sons, he decided to make Prince Tu the new crown prince. Because Prince Tu was a young boy and his mother was of a lowly status, Duke Jing ordered the ministers Guo Xia of the Guo clan and Gao Zhang of the Gao clan to support Prince Tu and exile the other princes to the remote city of Lai.[1][2]
Reign[]
Duke Jing died soon afterward in the autumn of 490 BC. Guo and Gao installed Prince Tu on the throne, and the other princes escaped to the nearby states of Wey and Lu. However, the next year the Tian and Bao clans, led by Tian Qi and Bao Mu, staged a coup d'etat and defeated the Gao and Guo clans. Tian Qi brought back Prince Yangsheng, an older half-brother of Prince Tu, from Lu and installed him on the throne, to be known as Duke Dao of Qi. Bao Mu was reluctant to depose Prince Tu but dared not oppose Tian. Duke Dao soon killed Prince Tu, who is posthumously known as An Ruzi. The Tian clan would from then on increasingly dominate the power of Qi, eventually replacing the House of Jiang as rulers of Qi in 386 BC.[1][2]
Ancestry[]
Duke Hui of Qi (d. 599 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Duke Qing of Qi (d. 582 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Xiao Tong Shu Zi | |||||||||||||||||||
Duke Ling of Qi (d. 554 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Sheng Meng Zi | |||||||||||||||||||
Duke Jing of Qi (d. 490 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Shusun Dechen (d. 604 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Shusun Qiaoru | |||||||||||||||||||
Mu Meng Ji of Lu | |||||||||||||||||||
An Ruzi (d. 489 BC) | |||||||||||||||||||
Yu Si of Chunyu | |||||||||||||||||||
References[]
- ^ a b c Sima Qian. 齐太公世家 [House of Duke Tai of Qi]. Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). Guoxue.com. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
- ^ a b c d Han Zhaoqi (韩兆琦) (2010). "House of Duke Tai of Qi". Shiji (史记) (in Chinese). Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company. pp. 2584–2588. ISBN 978-7-101-07272-3.
- ^ The Shiji incorrectly gives her name as Rui Ji and Rui Zi.
- Monarchs of Qi (state)
- 5th-century BC Chinese monarchs
- 489 BC deaths
- Child rulers from Asia
- 5th-century BC murdered monarchs
- Assassinated Chinese politicians