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Yuan Ye (emperor)

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Emperor of Northern Wei
Yuan Ye
元曄
Emperor ofNorthern Wei
ReignDecember 5, 530[1] – April 1, 531[2]
PredecessorEmperor Xiaozhuang
SuccessorEmperor Jiemin
Died26 December 532
Names
Family name: Yuán (元)
Given name: Yè (曄)
Era name and dates
Jiàn míng (建明): 530-531
HouseYuan
DynastyNorthern Wei

Yuan Ye (Chinese:元曄) (509? – 26 December 532[3]),courtesy nameHuaxing (華興), nicknamePenzi (盆子), often known by his pre-imperial titlePrince of Changguang (長廣王), was briefly anemperor of theXianbei-ledNorthern Wei dynasty of China. He was declared emperor by members of the paramount generalErzhu Rong's clan in 530 afterEmperor Xiaozhuang had killed Erzhu Rong, and he carried imperial title for several months. However, as a member of the imperial clan who was distant from the lineage of recent emperors (as a descendant ofEmperor Wencheng's brother Yuan Zhen (元楨) the Prince of Nan'an, he was not a credible emperor, and in 531, after the Erzhus had prevailed over Emperor Xiaozhuang and put him to death, they forced Yuan Ye to yield the throne to Emperor Xiaozhuang's cousinYuan Gong the Prince of Guangling, who took the throne as Emperor Jiemin. Emperor Jiemin treated Yuan Ye with respect and created him the Prince of Donghai, a higher title than his prior title of Prince of Changguang, but after Emperor Jiemin and the Erzhus were in turn overthrown by a coalition led by the generalGao Huan and replaced withEmperor Xiaowu, Emperor Xiaowu forced Yuan Ye to commit suicide.[4]

Background

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Relatively not much is known about Yuan Ye's early life. His father Yuan Yi (元怡) was a son of Tuoba Zhen (拓拔楨) the Prince of Nan'an, a brother ofEmperor Wencheng and son ofTuoba Huang,Emperor Taiwu'scrown prince. Tuoba Zhen's line was dishonored after Tuoba Zhen participated in a plot againstEmperor Xiaowen'ssinicization regime, but Yuan Yi's older brother Yuan Ying (元英) was eventually created the Prince of Zhongshan after he achieved much in the battlefield. Yuan Yi himself was said to be corrupt and violent when serving as the commanding general of the garrison at remote Shanshan (鄯善, in modernTurpan,Xinjiang), and who fled and hid after accusations of such corruption was made against him, dying while in flight sometime between 512 and 515. One of Yuan Yi's sisters married the generalErzhu Rong, and after Erzhu became the paramount general of the empire during the reign ofEmperor Xiaozhuang, Yuan Yi was posthumously honored as the Prince of Fufeng.

Yuan Ye himself was not Yuan Yi's oldest son, as he had at least one older brother, Yuan Su (元肅). His mother was Lady Wei, and it is unclear whether she was Yuan Yi's wife or not. Early in Emperor Xiaozhuang's reign, probably on account of his aunt, Yuan Ye was created the Prince of Changguang on 21 May 528[5] and made the acting governor of Bing Province (并州, modern centralShanxi), deep in Erzhu Rong's power base. According to theBook of Wei (whose author,Wei Shou, however, might have had an incentive to defame him), he was frivolous and impatient, but physically strong, in his youth.

Becoming emperor

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In fall 530, Emperor Xiaozhuang, fearful that Erzhu Rong would eventually seize the throne, ambushed him inside the palace in the capitalLuoyang and killed him. Erzhu Rong's wife (Yuan Ye's aunt), along with Erzhu Rong's cousinErzhu Shilong, fought their way out of Luoyang and headed back north, meeting up with Erzhu Rong's nephewErzhu Zhao at Zhangzi (長子, in modernChangzhi,Shanxi). They decided to make Yuan Ye emperor, as a competing candidate for the throne against Emperor Xiaozhuang. Yuan Ye createda daughter of Erzhu Zhaoempress (although it is not clear whether he had already married her previously, or only married her at that point).

Less than two months later, the Erzhu forces captured Luoyang and arrested Emperor Xiaozhuang. Emperor Xiaozhuang was subsequently delivered to Jinyang (晉陽, in modernTaiyuan,Shanxi) and killed. Meanwhile, Erzhu Shilong, believing that Yuan Ye's mother Lady Wei would exert political influence, had her assassinated, but staging the assassination to appear as a robbery. Meanwhile, Yuan Ye himself was escorted south toward Luoyang, apparently to take over the throne formally.

However, Erzhu Shilong and his brothers secretly believed that Yuan Ye was too distant in lineage from the recent emperors and lacked sufficient good reputation to be emperor. They made overtures toYuan Gong the Prince of Guangling, a son of Emperor Xiaowen's brother Yuan Yu (元羽), forcing Yuan Gong to cooperate. When Yuan Ye arrived in Luoyang's vicinity, Erzhu Shilong forced him to yield the throne to Yuan Gong, who took the throne as Emperor Jiemin. (Erzhu Zhao, who was not involved in Erzhu Shilong's plot to replace Yuan Ye with Emperor Jiemin, was initially angered and considered attacking Erzhu Shilong, but calmed down after Erzhu Shilong sent his brother Erzhu Yanbo (爾朱彥伯) to explain the reasoning, and Erzhu Zhao did not carry out any further actions to try to restore Yuan Ye as emperor.)

After removal

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Emperor Jiemin created Yuan Ye the Prince of Donghai, a greater title than his original title of Prince of Changguang, and generally treated him with respect. However, Emperor Jiemin lacked much actual power, and the Erzhus remained in control of most of governmental and military affairs, drawing ire from the people for their corruption. The generalGao Huan declared a rebellion against the Erzhus in 531 and declared another member of the imperial clan,Yuan Lang, emperor. By 532, Gao had defeated the Erzhus and imprisoned Emperor Jiemin. Because Yuan Lang was also distant from the lineage of recent emperors, Gao then removed him and replaced him withYuan Xiu the Prince of Pingyang, a son of Yuan Huai (元懷), a son of Emperor Xiaowen, and Yuan Xiu took the throne as Emperor Xiaowu. In summer 532, Emperor Xiaowu first put Emperor Jiemin to death by poisoning. In winter 532, he similarly put Yuan Ye and Yuan Lang to death, probably by forcing them to commit suicide by poison. Yuan Ye died and his title of Prince of Donghai was not inherited by anyone.[6]

Family

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Consorts and issue

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  • Princess consort, of the Erzhu clan (王妃 爾朱氏)
  • Unknown
    • Yuan Liang, Marquis Jinyang (晉陽侯 元良)

Ancestry

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Emperor Taiwu of Northern Wei (408–452)
Tuoba Huang (428–451)
Empress Jing'ai (d. 428)
Tuoba Zhen (447–496)
Lady Liu
Yuan Yi
Yuan Ye (d. 532)
Lady Wei (d. 531)

References

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  1. ^ren'shen day of the 10th month of the 3rd year of theYong'an era, per Emperor Xiaozhuang's biography inBook of Wei. Note thatWei Shu used the term "zhu" (主, "master") to refer to Yuan Ye's ascension.
  2. ^Volume 11 ofBook of Wei indicate that Yuan Ye gave up the throne on theji'si day of the 2nd month, after Emperor Xiaozhuang's death. Since Emperor Xiaozhuang died in Jan 531, the corresponding date in the Julian calendar is 1 Apr 531.
  3. ^jia'chen day of the 11th month of the 1st year of theYong'xi era of Emperor Xiaowu's reign, per vol.05 ofBei Shi
  4. ^Yin-wei Li, Yin-wei Li; Qing Peng, Qing Peng; Mao-sheng Xiang, Mao-sheng Xiang; Wei-wei Wei, Wei-wei Wei (2015). "Effects of centre-beam approximation on airborne repeat-pass interferometric SAR".IET International Radar Conference 2015. Institution of Engineering and Technology. p. 6.doi:10.1049/cp.2015.1277.ISBN 978-1-78561-038-7.
  5. ^jia'chen day of the 4th month of the 1st year of theYong'an era, per Emperor Xiaozhuang's biography inBook of Wei
  6. ^(歷史), 葉惠芬.陳誠先生從政史料選輯 : 行政院美援運用委員會會議紀錄. Guo shi guan.ISBN 978-986-01-8034-3.OCLC 816393082.
Regnal titles
Preceded byEmperor of Northern Wei
530–531
Succeeded by
Emperors ofNorthern Wei,Eastern Wei andWestern Wei (includes chieftains of theTuoba clan andrulers of thestate of Dai)
Chieftains of theTuoba clan
Unified rule
Divided rule
Eastern area
Central area
Western area
Re-unified rule
Rulers ofDai
Emperors ofNorthern Wei
Posthumously
honoured
Honoured
Honoured thenposthumous
andtemple name retracted
Ruling
Self-proclaimed
Emperors ofEastern Wei
Emperors ofWestern Wei
Posthumously
honoured
Ruling
Northern Wei
Eastern Wei
Western Wei
Northern Qi
Northern Zhou
International
National
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