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Princess Duan (Murong Chui's wife)

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Princess Duan (段王妃, personal name unknown) (died 358), formallyEmpress Chengzhao (成昭皇后, literally "the successful and accomplished empress") was the first wife of theFormer Yan generalMurong Chui, who would later become the founder ofLater Yan. She was the mother of his sons Murong Ling (慕容令) andMurong Bao.[1]

Princess Duan was the daughter ofDuan Mopei (段末柸), one in a line ofDuan chiefs carrying the title of Duke ofLiaoxi.[2] Because she came from an honored lineage (originally on par with Former Yan's imperial clan, theMurongs), she did not respectMurong Jun (Emperor Jingzhao)'s wifeEmpress Kezuhun, and Empress Kezuhun despised her greatly. In 358, perhaps at Empress Kezuhun's instigation, theeunuch Nie Hao (涅浩) falsely accused Princess Duan ofwitchcraft. Murong Jun had her and her alleged coconspirator, Murong Chui's assistant Gao Bi (高弼), arrested.

Princess Duan and Gao were tortured, but they refused to admit the charges of witchcraft, and because of this the torture was intensified. Murong Chui was saddened by his wife's suffering, and he sent her a message trying to persuade her to end her suffering by admitting to the charge (and thus end the torture but be sentenced to death). Princess Duan remarked:

I am not fearful of death. However, if I falsely implicate myself, I admit to treason. I would be betraying my ancestors and dragging Your Royal Highness into this disaster. The results are dire, and I will not do this.

As she was interrogated, Princess Duan replied logically and openly, and Murong Chui was able to avoid being dragged into the case, but she still died in prison, either from the torture or a secret execution.

Murong Chui subsequently married her sister, and then her nieceDuan Yuanfei as his wife. In 388, after he had established Later Yan, he posthumously honored her as Empress Chengzhao.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abSnodgrass, Mary Ellen (2024-06-28).Witch Trials: A Worldwide Chronology (in Czech). McFarland.ISBN 978-1-4766-9441-2.
  2. ^柏楊 (1998).柏楊曰:讀通鑑,論歷史(4) (in Chinese). 遠流出版.ISBN 978-957-32-3543-9.
Empresses, queens, and princesses of theSixteen Kingdoms
Empresses, queens, and princesses consort
Cheng-Han (304–347)
Han-Zhao (304–329)
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Former Liang (320–376)
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