Fu Pi: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
 
(16 intermediate revisions by 11 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{About|the Chinese Former Qin emperor 苻丕|the plant known in Chinese as fǔ pí (腐蜱)|Premna microphylla}}
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}
{{Infobox royalty
|name=Emperor Aiping of Former Qin<br/>前秦哀平帝
Line 6:
|full name=Fu Pi (苻丕)
|birth_name=
|birth_date= unknown
|death_date=386
| era name = Tài 'ān (太安)
| era dates = 385–386
|posthumous name=Emperor Aiping (哀平皇帝, {{lit}} "lamentable and peaceful")
Line 15:
| predecessor = [[Fu Jian (337–385)|Fú Jiān]]
| successor = [[Fu Deng]]
| house = Fu
| dynasty = [[Former Qin]]
}}
'''Fu Pi''' ({{zh|c=苻丕}}; died[[fl.]] 357 - {{circa}}November 386<ref>10th month of the 11th year of the ''Tai'yuan'' era, per vol. 106 of ''Zizhi Tongjian''. The month corresponds to 8 Nov to 7 Dec 386 in the Julian calendar.</ref>), [[courtesy name]] '''Yongshu''' (永叔), formallyalso known by his [[posthumous name]] as the '''Emperor Aiping of (Former) Qin''' ((前)秦哀平帝),<ref>{{cite book |title=十六國春秋別本·卷四前秦錄(Annals of the Sixteen Nations, ch. 4 - records of Former Qin)|language=zh}}</ref> was an [[Emperor of China|emperor]] of the [[Di (Five Barbarians)|Di]]-led [[Former Qin|Former Qin]] dynasty]] of China. He was [[Fu Jian (337–385)|Fu Jiān]] (Emperor Xuanzhao)'s oldest son, although not his [[crown prince]], and. afterAfter Fu Jiān's death at the hands of [[Yao Chang]], the founder of the [[Later Qin]] dynasty, Fu Pi and his brother Crown Prince Fu Hong (苻宏) the Crown Prince was forced to flee to the [[Jin Dynastydynasty (265-420266–420)#Eastern Jin (317–420)|Eastern Jin dynasty]],. heHe then claimed the imperial title in 385, but was defeated by the [[Western Yan]] prince [[Murong Yong]] in 386, and then subsequently killed by the Eastern Jin general Feng Gai (馮該).
 
==Early career==
It is not known when Fu Pi was born. Fu Pi was first mentioned in historical records in 357, when his father Fu Jiān overthrew the violent and whimsical emperor [[Fu Sheng (Former Qin)|Fu Sheng]] and took the throne with the title "Heavenly PrinceKing" (''[[Tian Wang]]''). Fu Jiān created Fu Pi, his oldest son, the Duke of Changle. At that time, Fu Pi was described to have talent in both governance and military matters, whose talents were only lesser to his uncle [[Fu Rong]], whose abilities were much praised by historians. He was appointed governor of Yongzhou (雍州, in modern southeastern [[Zhenyuan County, Gansu]]) in 368.
 
In 378, Fu Jiān commissioned Fu Pi to command a large army against the [[Jin Dynasty (265-420)|Jin]] city Xiangyang (襄陽, in modern [[Xiangfan]], [[Hubei]]). At the advice of the general Gou Chang (苟萇), Fu Pi chose to surround the city and cut off its supply route to strangle it into submission, rather than making direct assaults on the city. However, around the new year 379, Fu Jiān, anxious to capture the city, sent him a sword, stating that if by the spring he had not captured the city, he should kill himself with the sword. After receiving the sword, Fu Pi, in fear, made a fierce attack on the city and captured it.
Line 28 ⟶ 30:
Fu Pi was not involved in the crushing defeat that Former Qin forces suffered at the [[Battle of Fei River]], as he remained at Yecheng. In the aftermaths of the battle, however, the [[Xianbei]] general [[Murong Chui]], a Former Yan prince, plotted a rebellion to reestablish Yan. In late 383, after persuading Fu Jiān to allow him to visit the eastern provinces to try to calm the people in light of the defeat at Fei River, Murong Chui arrived at Yecheng, where Murong Chui continued plotting, and where Murong Chui and Fu Pi considered ambushing each other but each decided not to do so. When, subsequently, the [[Dingling]] chieftain Zhai Bin (翟斌) rebelled and attacked [[Luoyang]], defended by Fu Pi's brother Fu Hui (苻暉) the Duke of Pingyuan, Fu Jiān ordered Murong Chui to put down Zhai's rebellion, and Fu Pi sent his assistant Fu Feilong (苻飛龍) to serve as Murong Chui's assistant. On the way to Luoyang, however, Murong Chui killed Fu Feilong and his Di soldiers and prepared to openly rebel. Meanwhile, despite his suspicions of Murong Chui, Fu Pi did not put Murong Chui's son [[Murong Nong]] and nephews Murong Kai (慕容楷) and Murong Shao (慕容紹) under surveillance, and the three fled out of Yecheng and started a rebellion of their own.
 
In spring 384, [[Murong Chui]] openly declared the establishment of [[Later Yan]], claiming the title of Prince of Yan. Fu Pi tried to persuade Murong Chui to end his rebellion, but Murong Chui refused and attacked Yecheng but was unable to capture it quickly. However, most cities north of the [[Yellow River]] and east of [[Taihang Mountains]] switched allegiance or were captured by Later Yan forces, leaving Yecheng isolated. (The Former Qin cities south of the Yellow River were largely captured by Jin.) With the heart of the empire itself under attacks by rebel regimes [[Later Qin]] and [[Western Yan]], Fu Pi could have no expectation of receiving aid, and the situation soon grew desperate for him and his troops. In late 384, Murong Chui briefly lifted the siege of Yecheng to try to regroup, but at the same time, Jin forces attacked. Fu Pi sued for peace, but without his knowledge his assistant Yang Ying (楊膺) also promised on his behalf that he would surrender to Jin. With that promise, the Jin general [[Xie Xuan]] aided him with troops and food supplies, but eventually the temporary alliance broke up again. Meanwhile, Murong Chui returned and again put the city under siege after defeating Jin troops under [[Liu Laozhi]] (劉牢之). In 385, Fu Pi abandoned Yecheng and headed northwest to Jinyang (晉陽, in modern [[Taiyuan]], [[Shanxi]]), where he received news that his father Fu Jiān had been killed by the Later Qin ruler [[Yao Chang]]. He then declared himself emperor.<ref>{{cite book |title=晉書·苻丕傳 (The Book of Jin - Biography of Fu Pi) |language=zh}}</ref>
 
==Reign==
Line 49 ⟶ 51:
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==Further reading==
*"The book of Jin:The First and Second biographies of Fu Jian and the biography of Fu Pi" (《晉書·載記》苻堅傳上、下及苻丕傳)
*[[Zizhi Tongjian]](《資治通鑑》) Chapters 104-106
 
{{s-start}}
Line 73 ⟶ 79:
[[Category:386 deaths]]
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:Sixteen Kingdoms people killed in battlesbattle]]