Princess Jincheng

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Princess Jincheng
金城公主
Born698
Died739 (aged 40–41)
SpouseEmperor Tridé Tsuktsen
HouseHouse of Li
FatherLi Shouli

Princess Jincheng (Tibetan: ཀིམ་ཤེང་ཁོང་ཅོ་, Wylie: Kyim-sheng Kung-co, Chinese: 金城公主; pinyin: Jīnchéng Gōngzhǔ; Wade–Giles: Chin-ch'eng Kung-chu, c. 698 – 739), surnamed Li, was a member of a minor branch of the royal clan of the Chinese Tang dynasty.

Princess Jincheng was a daughter of Li Shouli, a prince of Tang China.[1] She grew up in the court and was regarded by Emperor Zhongzong of Tang as a foster daughter.

Emperor Zhongzong received an ambassador sent by Empress Dowager Khri ma lod of the Tibetan Empire requesting a marriage alliance between the future emperor, Tridé Tsuktsen, and a Tang princess.[2] [3]Emperor Zhongzong conferred the title of Princess Jincheng upon his foster daughter and, in 710, a minister of Tibet arrived to collect her. On his arrival, Emperor Zhongzong entertained the minister by having his sons-in-law play ball sports with him.[4] Princess Jincheng was then married to Emperor Tridé Tsuktsen of Tibet, in accordance with the heqin policy.

Princess Jincheng was expected to act as an ambassador to the Tibetan Empire and assist as a Tang diplomat to the Tibetan court. In one case, she solved a dispute between the Tibetan and Tang envoys by erecting a plaque to mark the two territories.[5] In 723, unhappy with her marriage, Princess Jincheng ask for asylum with the King of Kashmir, but she was persuaded to remain in Tibet. The Emperor Zhongzong, saddened by the loss of his daughter, requested that poems be written in her honor. The poet Wang Zhihuan answered with "Beyond the Border", a reference to her trip through Yumen Pass. [6][7]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Liu (945), volume 7.
  2. ^ Liu (945), volume 107.
  3. ^ "Princess Jinching". 15 December 2018.
  4. ^ Liu (945), volume 107.
  5. ^ Liu (945), volume 7.
  6. ^ "Princess Jinching". 15 December 2018.
  7. ^ "Three Hundred Tang Poems/Beyond the Border - Wikibooks, open books for an open world".

Works cited[]

Retrieved from ""