Everything about Zhang Chonghua totally explained
Zhang Chonghua (張重華) (
327-
353),
courtesy name Tailin (泰臨), formally
Duke Jinglie of Xiping (西平敬烈公,
posthumous name given by
Jin Dynasty (265-420)) or
Duke Huan of Xiping (西平桓公, posthumous name used internally in Former Liang) was a ruler of the
Chinese state
Former Liang. During his reign, he often not only used the Jin-created title Duke of Xiping, but also used the title "Acting Prince of Liang" (假涼王). During the brief reign of his brother
Zhang Zuo, he was honored as
Prince Ming of Liang (涼明王).
During his father's reign
Zhang Chonghua was born in
327, three years after his father
Zhang Jun had become the ruler of Former Liang, as his second son. His mother was
Lady Ma, a
concubine of Zhang Jun. In
333, at age six, he was made his father's
heir apparent. (It isn't clear why he was made heir apparent; he'd an older brother,
Zhang Zuo, and neither was born of Zhang Jun's wife
Princess Yan.) In
339, when Zhang Chonghua 12, Zhang Jun transferred some of his authority to Zhang Zhonghua and gave him the title of acting governor of Liang Province (涼州, modern central and western
Gansu). In early
346, when Zhang Jun divided his domain into three provinces, he made Zhang Zhonghua the governor of Liang Province.
Later in
346, Zhang Jun died. Zhang Chonghua succeeded him, and took the same titles he'd -- including the Duke of Xiping and the self-declared title Acting Prince of Liang. He honored his father's wife Princess Yan as Grand Princess Dowager and his mother Lady Ma as Princess Dowager.
Reign
Zhang Chonghua appeared to be a mediocre ruler, as he was criticized for spending too much time in games and pleasure. He also tended to trust flattering attendants, even though he wasn't criticized for being cruel or extravagant. In
349, Suo Zhen (索振) tried to persuade him to spend less time on games and not to reward his attendants with too much money, but while Zhang Chonghua thanked him and rewarded him, he didn't appear to change his ways significantly.
Soon after Zhang Chonghua succeeded his father, Later Zhao forces, under the generals Wang Zhuo (王擢) and Ma Qiu (麻秋), made a surprise attack against Former Liang, seizing Former Liang's territory south of the
Yellow River, including the important city of Jincheng (金城, in modern
Lanzhou,
Gansu). Zhang Chonghua commissioned
Xie Ai to lead his army, and Xie was able to defeat Ma and Wang's forces in 346 and again in
347, forcing them to retreat from their original plans to destroy Former Liang, but the land south of the Yellow River couldn't be recovered.
Also in 347, the Jin emissary Yu Gui (俞歸) arrived in Former Liang to confer Zhang Chonghua a number of offices -- but not the one that Zhang Chonghua was looking for, Prince of Liang. He tried to persuade Yu to grant him that title, but Yu would not, and so he detained Yu (who wouldn't be released until
363, long after Zhang Chonghua's death).
Zhang Chonghua appeared to have largely stood by as
Later Zhao collapsed during 349 to
351. Most of the western territory of Later Zhao fell into the hands of the
Di general
Fu Jiàn, who established
Former Qin in 351. In late
352 or early
353, the ex-Later Zhao general Wang Zhuo, who had been holding parts of modern eastern Gansu and who had declared loyalty to
Former Yan, couldn't resist Former Qin forces and surrendered to Zhang Chonghua, who treated him well, intending to use him as a general against Former Qin. In spring 353, he commissioned Wang, Zhang Hong (張弘), and Song Xiu (宋修) to lead 15,000 men against Former Qin, but suffered a great loss -- reportedly 12,000, or 80% of the army. Zhang and Song were captured, while Wang fled back to the capital Guzang (姑臧, in modern
Wuwei,
Gansu). In summer, however, Wang led 20,000 men and attacked Shanggui (上邽, in modern
Tianshui,
Gansu), capturing most of Qin Province (秦州, modern eastern Gansu). Zhang Chonghua then submitted a petition to
Emperor Mu of Jin, requesting a campaign against Former Qin. Emperor Mu sent messengers to praise and bestow more honors on Zhang Chonghua, but the Jin government didn't appear to be interested in attacking Former Qin at the time, so the plan wasn't carried out.
Later that year, Zhang Chonghua grew ill, and he designated his nine-year-old son
Zhang Yaoling to be his
heir apparent. His older brother Zhang Zuo the Marquess of Changning plotted with Zhang Chonghua's attendants Zhao Zhang (趙長) and Wei Qi (尉緝) to take over power, and Zhao and Wei falsely accused Deng Ai of crimes and had him exiled from the capital to be the governor of Jiuquan Commandery (酒泉, roughly modern
Jiuquan,
Gansu). Deng submitted a petition accusing Zhang Zuo and Zhao of plotting, and in winter of that year, when Zhang Chonghua grew gravely ill, he tried to summon Deng back to the capital to serve as Zhang Yaoling's regent, but the order was seized by Zhang Zuo and Zhao and never announced. He soon died, and Zhang Yaoling succeeded him, under the title Duke of Xiping. Zhang Zuo became regent, and in early
354 usurped the title from Zhang Yaoling.
Era name?
Most historical sources indicate that Zhang Chonghua, like his grandfather
Zhang Shi (張寔), his granduncle
Zhang Mao, and his father Zhang Jun, continued to use
Emperor Min of Jin's
era name Jianxing (both to show continued allegiance to Jin and to distance himself from
Emperor Yuan of Jin and his line) but some sources indicate that he changed era name to
Yongle (永樂 yǒng lè
346-
353). A current theory is that his era name was used internally while the
Jianxing era name was used when communicating with other states.
Personal information
- Father
- Mother
- Wife
- Major Concubines
- Lady Guo, likely mother of Zhang Xuanjing
- Children
Further Information
Get more info on 'Zhang Chonghua'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://zhang_chonghua.totallyexplained.com">Zhang Chonghua Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |