Later Zhao
From Wikinfo
This article is part of theSixteen Kingdoms series. |
| Han Zhao |
| Cheng Han |
| Later Zhao |
| Former Liang |
| Later Liang |
| Southern Liang |
| Western Liang |
| Northern Liang |
| Former Qin |
| Later Qin |
| Western Qin |
| Former Yan |
| Later Yan |
| Southern Yan |
| Northern Yan |
| Western Yan |
| Ran Min |
| Tuoba |
| Yuwen |
| Duan |
| Tiefu |
| Chouchi |
| Dingling |
The Later Zhao (Simplified Chinese character: 后赵, Traditional Chinese character: 後趙, Hanyu pinyin H�uzh�o) (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.
All rulers of the Han Zhao declared themselves "emperors".
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 m�ng) | Shi Le (石勒 Sh� L�) | 319-333 | Zhaowang (趙王 Zh�ow�ng) 319-328Taihe (太和 T�ih�) 328-330 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Haiyang (海陽王 Hǎiy�ng w�ng) | Shi Hong (石弘 Sh� hong2) | 333-334 | Yanxi (延熙 Y�nxī) 334 |
| Taizu (太祖 T�izǔ) | Wu (武 Wǔ) | Shi Hu (石虎 Sh� Hǔ) | 334-349 | Jianwu (建武 Ji�nwǔ) 335-349Taining (太寧 T�in�ng) 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Qiao (譙王 Qi�o w�ng) | Shi Shi (石世 Sh� Sh�) | 73 days in 349 | Taining (太寧 T�in�ng) 73 days in 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Pangcheng (彭城王 P�ngch�ng w�ng) | Shi Zun (石遵 Sh� Zūn) | 183 days in 349 | Taining (太寧 T�in�ng) 183 days in 349 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Yiyang (義陽王 Y�y�ng w�ng) | Shi Jian (石鑒 Sh� Ji�n) | 103 days within 349-350 | Qinglong (青龍 Qīngl�ng) 103 days within 349-350 |
| Did not exist | Prince of Xinxing (新興王 Xīnxīng w�ng) | Shi Zhi (石祗 Sh� Zhī) | 350-351 | Yongning (永寧 Yǒngn�ng) 349-350 |
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
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Later_Zhao" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Later_Zhao, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

