Kingdom of Shu
The Kingdom of Shu (蜀 shu3) (221-263) was one of the Three Kingdoms competing for control of China after the fall of the Han Dynasty.During the decline of the Han Dynasty, the area surrounding Shu was under the control of Liu Bei, a distant relative of the Han emperor. After Cao Pi of Wei seized the imperial throne in 220, he proclaimed himself to be the next Han emperor and the real ruler of China. Therefore the Kingdom of Shu is also known as the Kingdom of Shu-Han. Althrough Liu Bei is said to be the founder of the Shu-Han dynasty, he himself never claimed to be the founder of a new dynasty.
In 222, Liu Bei initiated an unsuccessful attack on the Kingdom of Wu. He survived this attack, but one year later he became ill and died. He was succeeded by Liu Chan, who did not really care for governance and left his kingdom in the hands of his ministers.
The prime minister of Shu, Zhuge Liang-whose name is synonmous with wisdom in China-made peace with Wu instead of taking revenge. He had a bigger target, the Kingdom of Wei. He himself died of disease during the seventh attempt to conquer Wei. Jiang Wei, his successor, also tried but failed.
In 263, it was Wei's turn to attack Shu. Jiang Wei was killed and the kingdom conquered. Liu Chan was captured and taken to Luoyang. The Wei emperor gave him the title Duke of Comfort and allowed him to retire in peace.
Important figures:
- Liu Bei (刘备)
- Liu Chan (刘禅)
- Guan Yu (关羽)
- Zhang Fei (张飞)
- Zhao Yun (赵云)
- Ma Chao (马超)
- Huang Zhong (黄忠)
- Zhuge Liang (诸葛亮)
- Pang Tong (庞统)
- Xu Shu (徐庶)
- Ma Su (马谡)
- Liao Hua (廖化)
- Zhang Yi (张嶷)
- Jiang Wei (姜维)
| Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號) | Family (in bold) and first names | Year(s) of Reigns | Era Names (Nian Hao 年號) and their range of years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Convention: use personal name | |||
| Zhao Lie Di (昭烈帝 zhao1 lie4 di4) | Liu Bei (劉備 liu2 bei4) | 221-223 | Zhangwu (章武 zhang1 wu3) 221-223 |
| Hou Zhu (後主 hou4 zhu3) | Liu Chan (劉禪 liu2 chan2) | 223-263 | Jianxing (建興 jian4 xing1) 223-237Yanxi (延熙 yan2 xi1) 238-257 |