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Yang Yan (empress)

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Yang Yan
楊艷
Empress consort of the Jin dynasty
Tenure20 March 266 – 25 August 274
SuccessorEmpress Yang Zhi
Born238
DiedAugust 25, 274(274-08-25) (aged 35–36)
SpouseEmperor Wu of Jin
IssueSima Gui[1]
Sima Zhong
Sima Jian (262 - 23 October 291[2])
Posthumous name
Empress Wuyuan (武元皇后)
FatherYang Wenzong
MotherLady Zhao

Yang Yan (楊艷) (238[3] – August 25, 274[4]), courtesy name Qiongzhi (瓊芝), formally Empress Wuyuan (武元皇后, "the martial and discerning empress") was an empress of the Western Jin dynasty. She was the first wife of Emperor Wu.

Early life and marriage to Sima Yan

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Yang Yan was a daughter of Yang Wenzong (楊文宗),[5] a marquess during the Cao Wei era, and his wife Lady Zhao. Her mother died early, probably when she was still in infancy, and she was initially raised by her maternal uncle and aunt (who breastfed her). After she grew older, she was raised by her stepmother Lady Duan. By this time, her father, who is said to have also died early, was probably dead.

When she was young, she was described as intelligent, studious and beautiful. A fortune teller once foretold that she would have an extraordinary honour, and it was said that when the Cao Wei regent Sima Zhao heard this, he took her and married her to his eldest son Sima Yan. She had three sons[6] and three daughters[7] with her husband. After Sima Zhao's death in September 265, Sima Yan inherited his father's position and forced the Cao Wei emperor Cao Huan to abdicate in favour of him about five months later. This action ended the state of Cao Wei and Sima Yan established the Jin dynasty (as Emperor Wu). On 20 March 266,[8] he created Yang Yan as empress.

As empress

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Empress Yang's oldest son, Sima Gui (司馬軌), died aged two (by East Asian reckoning), making her second son, Sima Zhong the legitimate heir, by traditional succession laws. However, Emperor Wu hesitated about selecting him as crown prince because he was developmentally disabled. Empress Yang was instrumental in persuading him to have her son designated crown prince anyway, arguing that tradition should not be abandoned easily. She was also instrumental in her son's selection of a wife, as Emperor Wu initially favoured Wei Guan's daughter, but Empress Yang, friendly with Jia Chong's wife Lady Guo, praised Jia's daughter Jia Nanfeng greatly, leading to Jia Nanfeng's selection as crown princess.

In 273, when Emperor Wu was seeking beautiful women to serve as his concubines, he initially put Empress Yang in charge of the selection process. She preferred those women with slender bodies and fair skin, but did not favour those with beautiful faces. She also left off the list a beauty named Bian, whom Emperor Wu favoured, stating that since the Bians have served as empresses for three generations of Cao Wei rulers (Cao Cao's wife Princess Bian, Cao Mao's empress and Cao Huan's empress) that it would be too degrading for her to be a concubine. This decision displeased Emperor Wu, so he took over the selection process. Despite this and her husband's obsession with accumulating concubines, they appeared to have had a genuine and continuing affection for each other.

In 274, Empress Yang grew ill. She became concerned that whoever would be empress next (she was particularly concerned about Consort Hu Fen (胡芬), whom Emperor Wu greatly favoured) would not support her son. She therefore asked Emperor Wu to marry her cousin Yang Zhi. Emperor Wu, distressed over her illness, agreed. She died soon thereafter in August and was buried with honours due an empress in the tomb that her husband was eventually buried at when he died in May 290. Concubine Zuo Fen wrote a long song of mourning in her honour.[9]

In December 276, based on his promise to her, the emperor married Yang Zhi and created her empress.

Notes

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  1. ^ According to vol.64 of Jin Shu, Sima Yi, son of Sima Wei, was made heir to Sima Gui; Gui was given the posthumous name of "Diao" in 289 (毗陵悼王轨,字正则,初拜骑都尉,年二岁而夭。太康十年,追加封谥,以楚王玮子义嗣。). According to Emperor Wu's biography in the same work, Sima Yi was made Prince of Piling on the same day his father was made Prince of Chu ([太康十年十一月]甲申,...,始平王玮为楚王,...始平王子仪为毗陵王,...) Jin Shu, vol.03; note the different characters used for "Yi". Emperor Hui's biography recorded that Sima Gui died on the jia'xu day of the 4th month of the 1st year of the Yuan'kang era ([元康元年]五月甲戌,毗陵王轨薨。) Jin Shu, vol.04; this record likely refers to Sima Yi's death instead. Also, there was no jia'xu day in the 5th month; the month corresponds to 14 Jun to 13 Jul 291 in the Julian calendar.
  2. ^ ([永平元年]九月甲午,大将军、秦王柬薨。) Jin Shu, vol.04. (元康元年薨,时年三十,...) Jin Shu, vol.64
  3. ^ According to Lady Yang's biography in Book of Jin, she was 37 (by East Asian reckoning) when she died. (泰始十年,崩于明光殿,绝于帝膝,时年三十七。) Jin Shu, vol.31. Thus by calculation, her birth year should be 238.
  4. ^ According to Sima Yan's biography in Book of Jin, Lady Yang died on the bingyin day of the 7th month of the 10th year of the Taishi era of his reign. This corresponds to 25 Aug 274 in the Julian calendar. ([泰始十年]秋七月丙寅,皇后杨氏崩。) Jin Shu, vol.03.
  5. ^ Volume 138 of Taiping Yulan recorded Yang Wenzong's name as Yang Bing (杨炳). There is speculation that "Wenzong" was Yang Bing's courtesy name; during the Tang dynasty when the Book of Jin was compiled, "Bing" violated the naming taboo as Li Bing was Tang Gaozu Li Yuan's father.
  6. ^ (杨元后生毗陵悼王轨、惠帝、秦献王柬。) Jin Shu, vol.64. The volume contained the biographies of Emperor Hui's two full-brothers.
  7. ^ (生毗陵悼王轨、惠帝、秦献王柬,平阳、新丰、阳平公主。) Jin Shu, vol.31.
  8. ^ bingwu day of the 1st month of the 2nd year of the Taishi era, per Emperor Wu's biography in Book of Jin.
  9. ^ Kang-i Sun Chang; Haun Saussy, eds. (1999). Women writers of traditional China: an anthology of poetry and criticism. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-585-36761-2. OCLC 47008186.

Sources

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  • Kang-i Sun Chang; Haun Saussy; Charles Yim-tze Kwong (1999). Women writers of traditional China: an anthology of poetry and criticism. Stanford University Press.
Chinese royalty
New dynasty Empress of the Jin dynasty (266–420)
265–274
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Empress Bian of Cao Wei
Empress of China (Northern/Central/Southwestern)
265–274