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Sun Shao (general)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eastern Wu state general (188–241)
For other people named Sun Shao, seeSun Shao.
Sun Shao
孫韶
Governor ofYou Province (幽州牧)
(nominal)
In office
? – 241 (241)
MonarchSun Quan
General Who Guards the North (鎮北將軍)
In office
229 (229) – ?
MonarchSun Quan
General Who Spreads Might (揚威將軍)
In office
221 (221) – 229 (229)
MonarchSun Quan
Personal details
Born188[1]
Died241 (aged 53)[1]
RelationsSeeEastern Wu family trees
Children
  • Sun Kai
  • Sun Yue
  • Sun Yi
  • Sun Yi
  • Sun Hui
OccupationGeneral
Courtesy nameGongli (公禮)
PeerageMarquis of Jiande (建德侯)
Other nameYu Shao (俞韶)
In thisChinese name, thefamily name isSun.

Sun Shao (188–241),[1] bornYu Shao,courtesy nameGongli, was a military general of the state ofEastern Wu during theThree Kingdoms period of China.Sun Ce, a warlord who lived in the lateEastern Han dynasty, granted the family name "Sun" to Sun Shao but never adopted him as a son. Sun Shao's uncle wasSun He (孫河) né Yu He (俞河), who had been brought into the Sun clan bySun Jian.[2] Sun Shao was described as a handsome man and was eightchi tall (approximately 184 cm).

Life

[edit]

In 204, the Grand Administrator of Danyang, Sun Jian's sonSun Yi was assassinated inWanling by rebels still loyal to their former masterSheng Xian. Sun He discovered the culprits, but as one of the assassins, Gai Lan (媯覽), held a high military post in the city, Sun He was unable to control the military and was killed as well. After the deaths of the assassins at the hands of Sun Yi's former subordinates Sun Gao (孫高) and Fu Ying (傅嬰), Sun Shao assumed control of DanyangCommandery's military forces.[3] The ruler ofEastern Wu,Sun Quan, tested Sun Shao's ability by feigning a night attack on his encampment, but found Sun Shao's men ready and his defences sound. The next day, Sun Quan rewarded the 16-year-old Sun Shao with the rank of colonel and control over the resources of Dantu (丹徒) and Qu'e (曲阿) counties, as well as formal control of the troops that had been under Sun He's command.[4]

Prior to 220, Sun Shao was promoted to Lieutenant-General (偏將軍) and appointed as the Administrator ofGuangling Commandery (roughly, the parts of modernJiangsu and extreme easternAnhui provinces which lie south of theHuai River and north of theYangtze). In 221, when Sun Quan became the King of Wu, he promoted Sun Shao to General Who Spreads Might (揚威將軍), and granted the marquisate of Jiande in present-dayHangzhou.[5]

In late 225,Cao Wei's emperorCao Pi, in a continuing effort to make Sun Quan's crown princeSun Deng a hostage at his court, advanced a huge army of over 100,000 troops through Sun Shao's territory in Guangling, with the intention of crossing theYangtze River and marching to Wu's capital atJianye. Unfortunately for him, the winter weather had made the river impassable with ice. Unable to get his boats safely into the river, Cao Pi withdrew in force.[6] According to Zhang Bo's (張勃)Record of Wu (吳錄), during the withdrawal, Sun Shao ordered his subordinate officer Gao Shou (高壽) and others to take some 500 of their most valiant warriors and make a night raid on the Wei lines in an attempt to capture Cao Pi alive. Gao Shou and his troops managed to capture several carriages in Cao Pi's escort, but the man himself eluded them.[7]

In 229, when Sun Quan proclaimed himself emperor, Sun Shao was appointed General who Guards the North (鎮北將軍). Sometime after 230, he was granted the nominal governorship ofYou Province.[8] You Province comprised present-dayBeijing,Tianjin, parts of northeastHebei and westernLiaoning. Far from Wu's northern frontier, the area never fell under their control; granting the title was merely a political statement of Sun Quan's assumed imperial power. In 234, during thefourth Battle of Hefei, Sun Shao and another general,Zhang Cheng, were tasked with leading a Wu army to attack Guangling and Huaiyin (淮陰). The episode ended in failure for Wu when Sun Quan's siege of Hefei was broken.[9]

Sun Shao died of natural causes in 241.

Family

[edit]
See also:Eastern Wu family trees § Sun He (Bohai)

Sun Shao's son, Sun Kai, served as Militant General-in-Chief for Eastern Wu, one of the highest military appointments in the palace, sharing with two others the command of the imperial guard.[10] He also served as Junior Overseer of the Capital and was enfeoffed as the Marquis of Lincheng, in modern-dayXingtai,Hebei. In 276, Sun Kai was given the position of Cavalry General Garrisoning the Palace, but when bandits sneak-attacked the capital and killed emperorSun Hao's younger brother Sun Qian (孫謙), Sun Kai came under heavy suspicion from Sun Hao of collaborating with the bandits. Terrified, he took his household and a hundred or so of his personal guard and defected to theJin dynasty inc.July that year.Emperor Wu of Jin appointed him General of Chariots and Cavalry, a position similar to his appointment in Eastern Wu: one of three generals sharing command of the imperial guard.[11][12] Sun Kai was additionally enfeoffed as the Marquis of Danyang, a position which began to pay benefits following theconquest of Wu by Jin in 280.[13] Sun Kai died in 304.[14]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcde Crespigny (2007), p. 775.
  2. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1214.
  3. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, pp. 1214–6.
  4. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1216;Generals of the South, p. 231 (chapter 4Archived 2011-08-27 at theWayback Machine)
  5. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1216.
  6. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 2, p. 85;Zizhi Tongjian, chapter 70, p. 2225 (year 225, entry 9);Generals of the South, p. 384 (chapter 7Archived 2011-06-08 at theWayback Machine)
  7. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 47, p. 1132 note 3.
  8. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1216.
  9. ^Zizhi Tongjian, chapter 72, p. 2293 (year 234, entry 7).
  10. ^Dictionary of Official Titles of Imperial China, p. 574, entry 7835
  11. ^Dictionary of Official Titles of Imperial China, p. 120, entry 352
  12. ^This is according to the main text of theRecords of the Three Kingdoms and the annals of Emperor Wu inBook of Jin (which also dated Sun Kai's surrender to the 6th month of the 2nd year of theXianning era; the month corresponds to 29 Jun to 27 Jul 276 in the Julian calendar.). According to theIntroduction to the Peers of Jin (晉諸公贊) by Fu Chang (傅暢) (d. 330), whence also Sun Kai's year of death, Sun Kai was appointed General Who Crosses theLiao (River) after Wu was conquered in May 280, a much more active and frontier-oriented generalship. SeeRecords of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1216, note 1.
  13. ^Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 51, p. 1216,
  14. ^(永安元年卒。)Jin Zhu Gong Zan annotation inSanguozhi, vol.51
Prominent people ofEastern Wu
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