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Emperor Taizong of Tang

Emperor Taizong of Tang (28 January 598 – 10 July 649), previously Prince of Qin, personal name Li Shimin, was the second emperor of the Tang dynasty of China, ruling from 626 to 649. He is traditionally regarded as a co-founder of the dynasty for his role in encouraging Li Yuan, his father, to rebel against the Sui dynasty at Jinyang in 617. Taizong subsequently played a pivotal role in defeating several of the dynasty's most dangerous opponents and solidifying its rule over China.[6][c]

Emperor Taizong of Tang
唐太宗
Huangdi 皇帝
Khan of Heaven
Portrait of Emperor Taizong of Tang on a hanging scroll, created during the Ming dynasty era, kept in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan
Emperor of China
Reign4 September 626[1] – 10 July 649
PredecessorEmperor Gaozu
SuccessorEmperor Gaozong
Born28 January 598[2]
Qingshan Palace[3] in Wugong,[4] Sui China
Died10 July 649 (aged 51)[5]
Cuiwei Palace in Chang'an, Tang China
Burial
ConsortsEmpress Wende
(m. 613; died 636)
IssueSee § Family
Names
Family name: Li ()
Given name: Shimin (世民)
Era name and dates
Zhenguan (貞觀): 4 September 626 – 10 July 649
Posthumous name
Short: Wen Huangdi (文皇帝)
Full: Wen Wu Dasheng Daguang Xiao Huangdi[a]
文武大聖大廣孝皇帝[b]
Temple name
Taizong (太宗)
HouseHouse of Li
FatherEmperor Gaozu
MotherEmpress Taimu
Tang Taizong
Chinese唐太宗
Literal meaning"Great Ancestor of the Tang"
Qin Wang
Chinese秦王
Literal meaningKing of Qin
Li Shimin
Chinese李世民

Taizong is considered to be one of the greatest emperors in China's history and henceforth, his reign became regarded as the exemplary model against which all future emperors were measured. His era, the "Reign of Zhenguan (Chinese: 貞觀之治; pinyin: Zhēnguàn Zhī Zhì)" is considered a golden age in ancient Chinese history and was treated as required studying material for future crown princes. Taizong continued to develop imperial examination systems. He asked his officers to become loyal to the policies not people, in order to eliminate corruption.[8] Under the Zhenguan era, Tang China flourished economically and militarily. For more than a century after his death, China enjoyed prosperity and peace brought about by the solidification of imperial protection over the Chinese regions. In territorial extent, it covered most of the territories previously held by the Han dynasty and parts of modern Korea, Vietnam, Russia, Mongolia, Xinjiang, and Central Asian regions. This era of consolidation and conquest laid the foundation for Xuanzong's reign, which is considered to be the height of the Tang dynasty.

In 630, Emperor Taizong sent his general Li Jing against the Eastern Turks, defeating and capturing their Jiali Khan Ashina Duobi and destroying their power. This made Tang the dominant power in East and Central Asia, and Emperor Taizong subsequently took the title of Tengeri Qaghan (Chinese: 天可汗; pinyin: Tiān Kěhán; Wade–Giles: T'ien K'ehan, "Tenger Khan" or the God like Emperor).[9] He also launched a series of campaigns against the oasis states of the Tarim Basin, and against the armies of their main ally, the Western Turks. During his reign, Tang armies annexed Karakhoja in 640, Karasahr in 644 and Kucha in 648.[10] Eventually, the Tang defeated and annexed the Western Gokturk khaganate after Su Dingfang defeated Qaghan Ashina Helu in 657.

Unlike much of the nobility in his time, Emperor Taizong was a frank rationalist and scholar of logic and scientific reason, openly scorning superstitions and claims of signs from the heavens. He also modified important rites in order to ease the burden of agricultural labour.[11] The modern Chinese historian Bo Yang opined that Emperor Taizong achieved greatness by enduring criticism which others would find difficult to accept whilst trying hard not to abuse his absolute power (using Emperor Yang of Sui as a negative example), as well as through his employment of capable chancellors such as Fang Xuanling, Du Ruhui and Wei Zheng. Emperor Taizong's wife Empress Zhangsun also proved to be a capable assistant.[12]

Early life

Lǐ Shìmín was born in 598 at Wugong, in modern Xianyang, Shaanxi).[13] His father Li Yuan, the Duke of Tang, was a general of the Sui Dynasty, and a nephew, by marriage, to Sui's founding emperor Emperor Wen. Li Shimin's grandmother Duchess Dugu was a sister of Empress Dugu, both of whom were daughters of Dugu Xin, a major Xianbei general during Sui's predecessor dynasty Northern Zhou.[14] Li Shimin's mother, Li Yuan's wife Duchess Dou, was a daughter of Dou Yi (竇毅), the Duke of Shenwu, and his wife, Northern Zhou's Princess Xiangyang. Duchess Dou bore Li Yuan four sons—an older brother to Li Shimin, Li Jiancheng, and two younger brothers, Li Yuanba (李元霸), who would die in 614, and Li Yuanji – and at least one daughter (the later Princess Pingyang). Li Yuan named Li Shimin "Shimin" as a shortened form of the phrase "save the earth and pacify the people" (濟世安民; jìshì ānmín). Li Shimin apparently showed talent early in his life, and in 613, the official Gao Shilian, impressed with him, gave him a niece (the later Empress Zhangsun) in marriage as his wife; he was 14 and she was 12. In 615, when Emperor Wen's son and successor Emperor Yang was ambushed by Eastern Turkic (Dongtujue) forces under Shibi Khan at Yanmen Commandery (present-day Daixian in Shanxi),[15] a general call was made for men to join the army to help rescue the emperor. Li Shimin answered that call and served under the general Yun Dingxing (雲定興), apparently doing so with distinction. In 616, when Li Yuan was put in charge of the important city of Taiyuan, he brought Li Shimin with him to Taiyuan, while leaving at least three other sons—Li Jiancheng, Li Yuanji, and Li Zhiyun (李智雲, by Li Yuan's concubine Lady Wan)—at the ancestral home Hedong (河東, in modern Yuncheng, Shanxi).

Participation in the rebellion against Sui rule

 
A portrait of Emperor Yang of Sui, by the Tang court artist Yan Liben (600–673)

Emperor Yang was soon dissatisfied with Li Yuan and Wang Rengong (王仁恭), the governor of Mayi Commandery (馬邑, roughly modern Shuozhou, Shanxi), over their inability to stop Eastern Turkic incursions and the growing strength of agrarian rebels, particularly the Eastern Turkic-supported Liu Wuzhou, who soon rose against Wang, killed him, and captured Emperor Yang's secondary palace near Taiyuan. Li Yuan also became fearful of a prophecy that the next emperor would be named Li — Emperor Yang had previously killed another official, Li Hun (李渾), and Li Hun's clan over his fear that Li Hun's nephew, Li Min (李敏), would seize the throne.

Fearful for his life, Li Yuan considered rebellion. However, he did not know that Li Shimin had also been secretly discussing plans for rebellion with Li Yuan's associates Pei Ji and Liu Wenjing. Once Li Shimin's plans matured, he had Pei inform Li Yuan of them—and also had Pei warn Li Yuan that if it were revealed that Li Yuan had had sexual relations with some of Emperor Yang's ladies in waiting at the secondary Jinyang Palace (晉陽宮, which Pei was in charge with and had allowed Li Yuan to do so), all of them would be slaughtered. Li Yuan agreed to rebel, and after secretly summoning Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji from Hedong and his son-in-law Chai Shao (柴紹) from the capital Chang'an, he declared a rebellion, claiming to want to support Emperor Yang's grandson Yang You the Prince of Dai, nominally in charge at Chang'an with Emperor Yang at Jiangdu (江都, in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu), as emperor. He made both Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin major generals and advanced southwest, toward Chang'an. He gave Li Shimin the title of Duke of Dunhuang. After defeating local Sui forces loyal to Emperor Yang, he defeated a Sui army of 30,000 men under the command of a veteran general of the wars in Korea outside of modern-day Beijing.

However, when Li Yuan arrived near Hedong, his army was bogged down by the weather. With food running out, there were rumors that the Eastern Turks and Liu Wuzhou would attack Taiyuan. Li Yuan initially ordered retreat, but at the earnest opposition by Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin, continued to advance. After defeating Sui forces at Huoyi (霍邑, also in modern Yuncheng), he decided to leave a small contingent to watch over Hedong while advancing across the Yellow River into Guanzhong (i.e., the Chang'an region). Once he did, he headed for Chang'an himself, while sending Li Jiancheng to capture the territory around the Tong Pass region to prevent Sui forces at Luoyang from reinforcing Chang'an and Li Shimin north of the Wei River to capture territory there. Meanwhile, Li Shimin's sister (Chai's wife) had also risen in rebellion in support of him, and she was able to gather a sizeable army and capture some cities. She joined forces with Li Shimin and her husband Chai Shao. Soon, Li Yuan reconsolidated his forces and put Chang'an under siege. In winter 617, after defeating a large Sui army, he captured Chang'an from imperial forces and declared Yang You emperor (as Emperor Gong). He had himself made regent (with the title of grand chancellor) and created the Prince of Tang. (Meanwhile, most of the Sui territories and armies did not recognize Emperor Gong as emperor and continued to recognize Emperor Yang as emperor and not as retired emperor.) He made Li Shimin the Duke of Qin.

Li Yuan's control of the Chang'an region became almost immediately contested by the rebel ruler Xue Ju, the Emperor of Qin, who sent his son Xue Rengao toward Chang'an. Li Yuan sent Li Shimin to resist Xue Rengao, and Li Shimin defeated Xue Rengao at Fufeng, in modern Baoji, Shaanxi), temporarily causing Xue Ju to toy with the idea of surrendering to Li Yuan, although Xue was subsequently dissuaded by his strategist Hao Yuan (郝瑗) from doing so.

In spring 618, with Sui's eastern capital Luoyang (where the officials in charge did not recognize Li Yuan's authorities) under attack by the rebel ruler Li Mi the Duke of Wei, Li Yuan sent Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin to Luoyang, ostensibly to aid the Sui forces at Luoyang but instead intending to test whether Luoyang might submit to him. The officials at Luoyang rebuffed his attempt at rapprochement, and Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin, not wanting to fight either them or Li Mi for control of Luoyang at this stage, withdrew. Li Yuan subsequently changed Li Shimin's title to Duke of Zhao.

In summer 618, when news arrived at Chang'an that Emperor Yang had been killed at Jiangdu in a coup led by the general Yuwen Huaji, Li Yuan had Emperor Gong yield the throne to him, establishing Tang Dynasty as its Emperor Gaozu. He created Li Jiancheng crown prince but created Li Shimin the Prince of Qin, also making him Shangshu Ling (尚書令), the head of the executive bureau of the government (尚書省; Shàngshū Shěng) and a post considered one for a chancellor, while continuing to have Li Shimin serve as a major general as well.

During Emperor Gaozu's reign

 
Portrait painting of Emperor Gaozu of Tang, father of Li Shimin

Campaign to reunify the empire

The first thing that Li Shimin had to deal with was another incursion by Xue Ju, as Xue attacked Jing Prefecture (涇州, roughly modern Pingliang, Gansu) and Emperor Gaozu sent Li Shimin to resist Xue. Li Shimin established his defenses and refused to engage Xue to try to wear Xue Ju out, but at that time, he was afflicted with malaria, and he let his assistants Liu Wenjing and Yin Kaishan (殷開山) take command, ordering them not to engage Xue Ju. Liu and Yin, however, did not take Xue Ju seriously, and Xue Ju ambushed them at Qianshui Plain (淺水原, in modern Xianyang), crushing Tang forces and inflicting 50%–60% casualties. Li Shimin was forced to withdraw back to Chang'an, and Liu and Yin were removed from their posts. (This would be Li Shimin's only defeat recorded in historical records until the Goguryeo campaign of 645.) Xue Ju, in light of his victory, was ready to launch an assault on Chang'an itself, under Hao Yuan's advice, but suddenly died of an illness in fall 618 and was succeeded by Xue Rengao. Emperor Gaozu then sent Li Shimin against Xue Rengao. Three months after Xue Rengao took the throne, Li Shimin engaged him, and after a fierce battle between Li Shimin and Xue Rengao's major general Zong Luohou (宗羅睺), Li Shimin crushed Zong's forces, and then attacked Xue Rengao. Xue Rengao was forced to withdraw into the city of Gaozhi (高墌, in modern Xianyang as well), and once he did, his soldiers began surrendering to Li Shimin en masse. Xue Rengao was himself forced to surrender. Li Shimin had him delivered to Chang'an, where he was executed. Around new year 619, Emperor Gaozu made Li Shimin Taiwei (太尉, one of the Three Excellencies) and put him in charge of Tang operations east of the Tong Pass.[citation needed]

In spring 619, Liu Wuzhou launched a major offensive against Tang. He captured Taiyuan in summer 619, forcing Li Yuanji, who had been in charge there, to flee, and then continued his offensive south. Emperor Gaozu sent Pei Ji against him, but by winter 619, Liu had crushed Pei's forces and taken over nearly all of modern Shanxi. Emperor Gaozu, shocked at the development, considered abandoning the region altogether. Li Shimin opposed doing so and offered to lead the army against Liu. Emperor Gaozu agreed and commissioned him with an army. He crossed the Yellow River and approached Liu's major general Song Jingang (宋金剛) but did not engage him, choosing to try to wear Song out, only having his subordinates Yin Kaishan and Qin Shubao engage the other Dingyang generals Yuchi Jingde and Xun Xiang (尋相) in relatively low-level engagements. Eventually, in spring 620, when Liu and Song ran out of food supplies, they retreated, and Li Shimin gave chase, dealing Song a major defeat. Yuchi and Xun surrendered, and after Li Shimin chased further, both Liu and Song fled to the Eastern Turks. All of Dingyang territory fell into Tang hands.

In summer 620, Emperor Gaozu again commissioned Li Shimin against a major enemy—the former Sui general Wang Shichong, who had Sui's last emperor, Emperor Yang's grandson Yang Tong, yield the throne to him in 619, establishing a new state of Zheng as its emperor. When Li Shimin arrived at the Zheng capital Luoyang, Wang offered peace, but Li Shimin rebuffed him and put Luoyang under siege. Meanwhile, his subordinates took Zheng cities one by one. By winter 620, most of Zheng territory, other than Luoyang and Xiangyang, defended by Wang Shichong's nephew Wang Honglie (王弘烈), had submitted to Tang. Wang sought aid Dou Jiande the Prince of Xia, who controlled most of modern Hebei. Dou, reasoning that if Tang were able to destroy Zheng, his own Xia state would be next, agreed. He sent his official Li Dashi to try to persuade Li Shimin to withdraw, but Li Shimin detained Li Dashi and gave no response. Meanwhile, during the campaign, Li Shimin chose some 1,000 elite soldiers (玄甲軍), clad in black uniform and black armor, commanded by himself, to serve as advance troops, with Qin Shubao, Yuchi Jingde, Cheng Zhijie (程知節), and Zhai Zhangsun (翟長孫) as his assistants.

By spring 621, Luoyang was in desperate situation, and Xia forces had not yet arrived, but Tang troops had also suffered serious casualties, as Luoyang's defenses, aided by powerful bows and catapults, were holding. Emperor Gaozu, hearing that Dou had decided to come to Wang's aid, ordered Li Shimin to withdraw, but Li Shimin sent his secretary Feng Deyi to Chang'an to explain to Emperor Gaozu that if he did withdraw, Wang would recover and again be a major threat in the future. Emperor Gaozu agreed and allowed Li Shimin to continue to siege Luoyang. When Xia forward troops arrived first, Li Shimin surprised and defeated them, and then sent Dou a letter suggesting that he withdraw. Dou would not do so, and, against the advice of his wife Empress Cao and secretary general Ling Jing (凌敬) that he should instead attack Tang's prefectures in modern southern Shanxi, he marched toward Luoyang. Anticipating Dou's maneuver, Li Shimin left a small detachment, commanded by Li Yuanji, at Luoyang, while marching east himself, taking up position at the strategic Hulao Pass. When the armies engaged at Hulao, Li Shimin defeated Dou and captured him. He took Dou back to Luoyang and displayed him to Wang Shichong. Wang, in fear, considered abandoning Luoyang and fleeing south to Xiangyang, but as his generals pointed out that his only hope was Dou, he surrendered. Xia forces, after initially fleeing back to their capital Mingzhou (now Guangfu, Hebei), also surrendered. Zheng and Xia territory were Tang's. Li Shimin returned to Chang'an in a grand victory procession and, to reward Li Shimin, Emperor Gaozu awarded both him and Li Yuanji three mints so that they could mint money of their own. He also bestowed on Li Shimin the special title of "Grand General of Heavenly Strategies" (天策上將; tiāncè shàngjiàng). Meanwhile, Li Shimin's staff, already full of generals and strategists, were supplemented with a number of literary men.

The former Xia territory did not remain in Tang hands for long. In the winter of 621, the Xia general Liu Heita rose against Tang rule, claiming to be avenging Dou, whom Emperor Gaozu had executed against Li Shimin's wishes after he had been brought back to Chang'an. Liu was allied with Xu Yuanlang, a former agrarian rebel general who was nominally under Wang Shichong and who had submitted to Tang after Wang's defeat. Liu dealt successive defeats to Emperor Gaozu's cousin Li Shentong (李神通), the Prince of Huai'an; Li Xiaochang (李孝常), the Prince of Yi'an; and Li Shiji. By the end, he had recovered almost all of the former Xia territory, established his capital at Mingzhou, and proclaimed himself the Prince of Handong. Emperor Gaozu finally sent Li Shimin and Li Yuanji against him in 622 and, after some indecisive battles, Li Shimin defeated him by first erecting a dam across the Ming River and then destroying it, with the resultant flood destroying the rebel army. Liu fled to the Eastern Turks, while Li Shimin then headed east and defeated Xu. After leaving Li Shiji, Li Shentong, and Ren Gui (任瓌) to continue attacking Xu, Li Shimin returned to Chang'an.

Struggle against Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji

 
Armoured horseman, Tang dynasty
 
Tomb soldier figurine, Tang dynasty

By this point, Li Shimin and his older brother Li Jiancheng, who was created crown prince in 618, reportedly after Emperor Gaozu first offered the position to Li Shimin due to his contributions, were locked in an intense rivalry, as Li Shimin's accomplishments caused people to speculate that he would displace Li Jiancheng as crown prince, and Li Jiancheng, while an accomplished general himself, was overshadowed by his younger brother. The court became divided into a faction favoring the Crown Prince and a faction favoring the Prince of Qin. The rivalry was particularly causing problems within the capital, as the commands of the Crown Prince, the Prince of Qin, and the Prince of Qi (i.e., Li Yuanji) were said to have the same force as the emperor's edicts, and the officials had to carry conflicting orders out by acting on the ones that arrived first. Li Shimin's staff was full of talented men, but Li Jiancheng was supported by Li Yuanji, as well as Emperor Gaozu's concubines, who had better relationships with Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji than they did with Li Shimin.

Late in 622, when Liu Heita returned east after receiving aid from the Eastern Turks, defeating and killing Li Shimin's cousin Li Daoxuan (李道玄), the Prince of Huaiyang, he again regained most of former Xia territory. Li Jiancheng's staff members Wang Gui and Wei Zheng suggested that Li Jiancheng needed to enhance his own reputation in battle, and so Li Jiancheng volunteered for the mission. Emperor Gaozu thus sent Li Jiancheng, assisted by Li Yuanji, to attack Liu. Li Jiancheng defeated Liu around the new year of 623, and Liu was subsequently betrayed by his own official Zhuge Dewei (諸葛德威) and delivered to Li Jiancheng. Li Jiancheng executed Liu in his former capital and returned to Chang'an in triumph. China was, by this point, roughly united under Tang rule.

For the next few years, the rivalry intensified, although during the meantime both Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin served as generals when the Eastern Göktürks made incursions. In 623, when the general Fu Gongshi rebelled at Danyang (丹楊, in modern Nanjing, Jiangsu), Emperor Gaozu briefly commissioned Li Shimin to attack Fu, but soon cancelled the order and sent Li Shimin's cousin Li Xiaogong the Prince of Zhao Commandery instead.

In 624, when Li Jiancheng was found to have, against regulations, tried to add soldiers to his guard corps, Emperor Gaozu was so angry that he put Li Jiancheng under arrest. In fear, Li Jiancheng's guard commander Yang Wen'gan (楊文幹) rebelled. Emperor Gaozu sent Li Shimin against Yang, offering to make him crown prince after he returned. After Li Shimin left, however, Feng Deyi (now a chancellor), Li Yuanji, and the concubines all spoke on Li Jiancheng's behalf, and after Li Shimin returned, Emperor Gaozu did not depose Li Jiancheng, but instead blamed the discord between him and Li Shimin on Li Jiancheng's staff members Wang Gui and Wei Ting (韋挺) and Li Shimin's staff member Du Yan, exiling them to Xi Prefecture (巂州, roughly modern Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan).

Later that year, Emperor Gaozu, troubled by repeated Göktürk incursions, seriously considered burning Chang'an to the ground and moving the capital to Fancheng, a suggestion that Li Jiancheng, Li Yuanji, and Pei Ji agreed with. Li Shimin opposed, however, and the plan was not carried out. Meanwhile, Li Shimin himself was sending his confidants to Luoyang to build up personal control of the army there. After an incident in which Li Shimin suffered a severe case of food poisoning after feasting at Li Jiancheng's palace—an event that both Emperor Gaozu and Li Shimin apparently interpreted as an assassination attempt—Emperor Gaozu considered sending Li Shimin to guard Luoyang to prevent further conflict, but Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji, after consulting each other, believed that this would only give Li Shimin an opportunity to build up his personal power there, and therefore opposed it. Emperor Gaozu therefore did not carry out the plan. Meanwhile, the rivalry continued. Traditional historical accounts also indicated that at one point, when Li Shimin visited Li Yuanji's mansion, Li Yuanji wanted to assassinate Li Shimin, but Li Jiancheng, who could not resolve to kill a brother, stopped the plot. There was yet another incident in which Li Jiancheng, knowing that a horse threw its rider easily, had Li Shimin ride it, causing Li Shimin to fall off from it several times.

By 626, Li Shimin was fearful that he would be killed by Li Jiancheng, and his staff members Fang Xuanling, Du Ruhui, and Zhangsun Wuji were repeatedly encouraging Li Shimin to attack Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji first—while Wei Zheng was encouraging Li Jiancheng to attack Li Shimin first. Li Jiancheng persuaded Emperor Gaozu to remove Fang and Du, as well as Li Shimin's trusted guard generals Yuchi Jingde and Cheng Zhijie, from Li Shimin's staff. Zhangsun Wuji, who remained on Li Shimin's staff, continued to try to persuade Li Shimin to attack first.

In summer 626, the Göktürks were making another attack, and under Li Jiancheng's suggestion, Emperor Gaozu, instead of sending Li Shimin to resist the Göktürks as he first was inclined, decided to send Li Yuanji instead. Li Yuanji was given command of much of the army previously under Li Shimin's control, further troubling Li Shimin, who believed that with the army in Li Yuanji's hands, he would be unable to resist an attack. Li Shimin had Yuchi summon Fang and Du back to his mansion secretly, and then on one night submitted an accusation to Emperor Gaozu that Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji were committing adultery with Emperor Gaozu's concubines. Emperor Gaozu, in response, issued summonses to Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji for the next morning, convening the senior officials Pei Ji, Xiao Yu, and Chen Shuda to examine Li Shimin's accusations. As Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji approached the central gate leading to Emperor Gaozu's palace, Xuanwu Gate (玄武門), Li Shimin carried out the ambush he had set. He personally fired an arrow that killed Li Jiancheng. Subsequently, Yuchi Jingde killed Li Yuanji. Li Shimin's forces entered the palace and, under the intimidation of Li Shimin's forces, Emperor Gaozu agreed to create Li Shimin crown prince. Li Jiancheng's and Li Yuanji's sons were killed, and Li Shimin took Li Yuanji's wife Princess Yang as a concubine. Two months later, with Li Shimin firmly in control of power, Emperor Gaozu yielded the throne to him (as Emperor Taizong).

As emperor

Early reign (626–633)

 
 
Left: Hanging Portrait of Emperor Taizong, kept in the National Palace Museum. Right: A mural painting of Emperor Taizong (located bottom, center) dated to AD 642, located in Cave 220, Dunhuang, Gansu province.

One of the first actions that Emperor Taizong carried out as emperor was releasing a number of ladies in waiting from the palace and returning them to their homes, so that they could be married. He made his wife Princess Zhangsun the empress, and their oldest son Li Chengqian the crown prince.

Emperor Taizong also immediately faced a crisis, as the Eastern Turkic leader Jiali Khan Ashina Duobi, along with his nephew the subordinate Tuli Khan Ashina Shibobi (阿史那什鉢苾), launched a major incursion toward Chang'an, and just 19 days after Emperor Taizong took the throne, the two khans were just across the Wei River from Chang'an. Emperor Taizong, accompanied by Gao Shilian and Fang Xuanling, was forced to meet Ashina Duobi across the river and personally negotiate peace terms, including tributes to Eastern Turks, before Ashina Duobi withdrew.

Late in 626, Emperor Taizong ranked the contributors to Tang rule and granted them titles and fiefs, naming among the first rank of contributors Zhangsun Wuji, Fang Xuanling, Du Ruhui, Yuchi Jingde, and Hou Junji. When Li Shentong, as his distant uncle, objected to being ranked under Fang and Du, Emperor Taizong personally explained how Fang and Du's strategies allowed him to be successful, and this managed to get the other objectors to quiet down, as Emperor Taizong was even willing to rank low such an honored individual as Li Shentong. Emperor Taizong also buried Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji with honors due imperial princes and had their staff members attend the funeral processions. Meanwhile, he appeared to begin to reshuffle government further—which he had already begun after being created crown prince—by dismissing his father's trusted advisors Xiao Yu and Chen Shuda, making his own trusted advisors chancellors. (Xiao, however, was soon restored to being chancellor, although his career during Emperor Taizong's reign would see repeated dismissals and repeated restorations.) However, he also began to greatly pay attention to the officials' submissions and their criticism of imperial governance, making changes where he saw needed. He also particularly began to trust Wei Zheng, accepting much advice from Wei as far as his personal conduct was concerned. He was also willing to demote his own trusted advisors, as he demoted Gao Shilian after finding that Gao had held back submissions from his deputy Wang Gui. Viewing Sui's Emperor Yang as a negative example, he frequently solicited criticism, rewarding those officials willing to offer them, particularly Wei and Wang Gui. His openness to opposing ideas was also evident in his attempt to reconcile traditional Taoist religion and Buddhism, as demonstrated in his Emperor's Preface to the Sacred Teachings (大唐三藏聖教序),[16] and Emperor Taizong was at least a nominal Taoist.[17]

Li Yi's Rebellion

Also in 627, the general Li Yi the Prince of Yan—a late-Sui warlord who later submitted to Tang, who associated with Li Jiancheng—fearing that Emperor Taizong would eventually take action against him, rebelled at Bin Prefecture (豳州, in modern Xianyang), but was quickly crushed by the official Yang Ji (楊岌) and killed in flight. Later that year, when Emperor Gaozu's cousin Li Youliang (李幼良) the Prince of Changle, the commandant at Liang Prefecture (涼州, roughly modern Wuwei, Gansu), was accused of allowing his staff to oppress the people and to trade with Qiang and Xiongnu tribesmen, Emperor Taizong sent the chancellor Yuwen Shiji (Yuwen Huaji's brother) to investigate, and in fear, Li Youliang's staff members plotted to hold him hostage and rebel. When this was discovered, Emperor Taizong forced Li Youliang to commit suicide. Late in the year, Wang Junkuo (王君廓), the commandant at You Prefecture (幽州, roughly modern Beijing), also rebelled, but was defeated quickly and killed in flight. However, although there were also reports that Feng Ang (馮盎), a warlord in the Lingnan region, was rebelling, Emperor Taizong, at Wei's suggestion, sent messengers to comfort Feng, and Feng submitted.

Also in 627, Emperor Taizong, seeing that there were too many prefectures and counties, consolidated and merged many of them, and further created another level of local political organization above prefectures—the circuit (; dào) – dividing his state into 10 circuits.

Campaign against the Eastern Turks

 
Emperor Taizong depicted giving an audience to Gar Tongtsen Yulsung, the ambassador of the Tibetan Empire, in a later copy of a painting by court artist Yan Liben (600–673 AD)

In 628, with Ashina Duobi and Ashina Shibobi having a falling out, Ashina Shibobi submitted to Emperor Taizong, as did the chieftains of Khitan tribes, who had previously submitted to the Eastern Turks. With their khaganate in turmoil, Ashina Duobi was no longer able to protect the last late-Sui rebel ruler who alone remained standing against Tang pressure – Liang Shidu the Emperor of Liang, and in summer 628, with the Tang generals Chai Shao and Xue Wanjun (薛萬均) sieging the Liang capital Shuofang (in modern Yulin, Shaanxi), Liang Shidu's cousin Liang Luoren (梁洛仁) killed Liang Shidu and surrendered, finally uniting China. With the Eastern Turkic Khaganate weakened, their vassal Xueyantuo also broke away and formed its own khanate, and Emperor Taizong entered into an alliance with Xueyantuo's leader Yinan, creating Yinan the Zhenzhupiqie Khan (or Zhenzhu Khan in short).

In late 629, believing the time ripe for a major attack on the Eastern Turks, Emperor Taizong commissioned the general Li Jing with overall command of a multi-pronged army, assisted by the generals Li Shiji, Li Daozong, Chai Shao, Xue Wanche (薛萬徹, Xue Wanjun's brother) and Su Dingfang, attacking the Eastern Turks at multiple points. The army was successful in its attacks, forcing Ashina Duobi to flee, and by late spring 630, Ashina Duobi had been captured, and Eastern-Turkic chieftains all submitted to Tang. Emperor Taizong spared Ashina Duobi but detained him at Chang'an, and he considered what to do with the Eastern Turks.

The main opposing views were from the chancellors Wen Yanbo (who advocated leaving the Turks within China's borders to serve as a defense perimeter) and Wei (who advocated leaving them outside the borders). Emperor Taizong accepted Wen's suggestion and established a number of prefectures to accommodate the Turks, leaving them governed by their chieftains without creating a new khan to govern them.

In 631, Emperor Taizong established a feudal scheme, where the contributors to his reign were given, in addition to their current posts, additional posts as prefectural governors, to be passed on to their descendants. Soon, however, receiving much opposition to the plan, the strongest of which came from Zhangsun Wuji, Emperor Taizong cancelled the scheme. After the conquest of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate, Emperor Taizong's officials repeatedly requested that he carry out sacrifices to heaven and earth at Mount Tai, and Emperor Taizong, while at times tempted by the proposal, was repeatedly dissuaded from doing so by Wei, who pointed out the expenses and the labors that would be imposed on the people as a result, and also that this would open China's borders to attack.

Middle reign (634–641)

 
Detail of Yan Liben's painting on the reception of the Tibetan envoy, showing Tang Taizong

In 634, Emperor Taizong sent 13 high level officials, including Li Jing and Xiao Yu, to examine the circuits to see whether the local officials were capable, to find out whether the people were suffering, to comfort the poor, and to select capable people to serve in civil service. (Li Jing initially recommended Wei Zheng, but Emperor Taizong declined sending Wei, stating that Wei needed to stay to point out his faults and that he could not afford to have Wei away even for a single day.)[citation needed]

Campaign against Tuyuhun

Around this time, Tang was having increasing conflicts with Tuyuhun, whose Busabo Khan Murong Fuyun, under instigation by his strategist the Prince of Tianzhu, had been repeatedly attacking Tang prefectures on the borders. At one point, Murong Fuyun sought to have a Tang princess marry his son the Prince of Zun, but the marriage negotiations broke down over Emperor Taizong's insistence that the Prince of Zun come to Chang'an for the wedding. In summer 634, Emperor Taizong had the generals Duan Zhixuan and Fan Xing (樊興) lead forces against Tuyuhun, but with Tuyuhun's forces highly mobile and avoiding direct confrontation, Duan, while not defeated, could not make major gains. Once Duan withdrew, Tuyuhun resumed hostilities. In winter 634, with the Tibetan king Songtsän Gampo making overtures to marry a Tang princess as well, Emperor Taizong sent the emissary Feng Dexia (馮德遐) to Tibet with an eye toward an alliance against Tuyuhun. In winter 634, he commissioned Li Jing, assisted by the other generals Hou Junji, Xue Wanjun, Xue Wanche, Qibi Heli, Li Daozong, Li Daliang, Li Daoyan (李道彥), and Gao Zengsheng (高甑生), to attack Tuyuhun. In 635, Li Jing's forces crushed Tuyuhun forces. Murong Fuyun was killed by his own subordinates, and his son Murong Shun killed the Prince of Tianzhu and surrendered. Emperor Taizong created Murong Shun the new khan, although Murong Shun was soon assassinated. Emperor Taizong then created Murong Shun's son Murong Nuohebo as the new khan.

Also in 635, Emperor Gaozu died, and Emperor Taizong, observing a mourning period, briefly had Li Chengqian serve as regent, and after he resumed his authorities less than two months later, he still authorized Li Chengqian to thereafter rule on minor matters.

In spring 636, Emperor Taizong commissioned his brothers and sons as commandants and changed their titles in accordance with the commands that they received, sending them to their posts—with the exception of his son Li Tai the Prince of Wei, who by this point was beginning to be highly favored by him. He further allowed Li Tai to engage literary men to serve as his assistants, as Li Tai favored literature. From this point on, Li Tai would be so favored that there began to be talks that Emperor Taizong might let him displace Li Chengqian, whose favors began to wane. In fall 636, Empress Zhangsun died. Emperor Taizong mourned her bitterly and personally wrote the text of her monument.

In summer 637, Emperor Taizong recreated the feudal scheme that he had considered and abandoned in 631, creating 35 hereditary prefect posts. (By 639, however, the system was again abandoned after much opposition.)

Treatment of Noble Clan

 
Fountain Memory, calligraphy of Emperor Taizong on a Tang stele.

Sometime before 638, Emperor Taizong, disgusted with the traditional noble clans of Cui, Lu, Li, and Zheng and believing that they were abusing their highly honored names, commissioned Gao Shilian, Wei Ting, Linghu Defen, and Cen Wenben to compile a work later to be known as the Records of Clans (氏族志), with the intent of dividing the clans into nine classes based on their past contributions, good deeds, and ill deeds. In an initial draft that Gao submitted, he nevertheless ranked the branch of the Cui clan that the official Cui Min'gan (崔民幹) belonged to as the highest, a decision that Emperor Taizong rebuked, as he pointed out that Gao was merely again looking at tradition and not the recent contributions. He therefore personally intervened in revising the work, reducing Cui's clan to the third class.

Tibetan attack on Songzhou

In fall 638, Tibet's Songtsän Gampo, displeased that Emperor Taizong had declined to give him a Tang princess in marriage and believing that Murong Nuohebo had persuaded Emperor Taizong to decline the marriage proposal, launched a major attack with forces of 200,000 on Tuyuhun and then on several Tang prefectures, putting Song Prefecture (松州, roughly modern Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan) under siege. Emperor Taizong commissioned Hou Junji, assisted by Zhishi Sili (執失思力), Niu Jinda (牛進達), and Liu Jian (劉簡), of a total of force of 50,000 to counterattack, and Niu, who commanded the forward forces, defeated Tibetan forces at Song Prefecture. Songsän Gampo withdrew and sued for peace, but still sought to marry a Tang princess. Emperor Taizong agreed this time. Also in 638, believing that Xueyantuo was growing increasingly strong and difficult to control, Emperor Taizong granted Yinan's sons Bazhuo and Jialibi (頡利苾) both lesser khan titles, to try to create dissensions between them. In summer 639, Ashina Jiesheshuai (阿史那結社率), the younger brother of Ashina Shibobi, whom Emperor Taizong did not favor and gave little recognition to, formed a conspiracy with Ashina Shibobi's son Ashina Hexiangu (阿史那賀暹鶻) to assassinate Emperor Taizong. They had planned to wait for Li Zhi the Prince of Jin to depart from the palace in the morning and use that opportunity to attack the palace. On the day they planned, however, Li Zhi did not leave the palace, and Ashina Jiesheshuai attacked anyway but was quickly defeated, captured, and executed. After this incident, however, the officials began advocating sending the Turks away from the heart of the state. In fall 639, Emperor Taizong created a Turkish prince who had served him faithfully, Li Simo (né Ashina Simo) as the khan of a newly recreated Eastern Turkic state (as Qilibi Khan), giving him all of the Turks and Xiongnu who had surrendered as his subordinates, to be settled north of the Great Wall and the Yellow River. However, the Turks were fearful of Xueyantuo and initially refused to head to their new location. Emperor Taizong issued an edict to Yinan that he and Li Simo keep their peace and not attack each other, and after receiving from Yinan the assurance that he would not attack, the Turks advanced to the new location.

Campaign against Western Turks

Taizong began a series of campaigns against the Western Turks (Xitujue) and their allies, the oasis states of the Tarim Basin, around 640.[18] These hostilities between the Western Turks and Tang would continue until the defeat and conquest of the Western Turks in 657 under Taizong's successor, Gaozong.[19] The kingdoms of Shule and Khotan surrendered to the Chinese in 632, as did the kingdom of Yarkand in 635.[10] Qu Wentai (麴文泰), the king of Gaochang, who had previously been submissive to Tang, had become increasingly hostile to Tang, allying with the Western Turks. In 640, Emperor Taizong commissioned Hou Junji, assisted by Xue Wanjun, to launch a major attack on Gaochang. As they approached Gaochang, Qu Wentai died in fear and was succeeded by his son Qu Zhisheng (麴智盛). Qu Zhisheng offered to submit, but Hou demanded a surrender, which Qu Zhisheng refused. However, Hou put Gaochang under siege, and with aid from the Western Turks not arriving, Qu Zhisheng surrendered. Wei Zheng suggested that Emperor Taizong allow Qu Zhisheng to remain king, pointing out that the monetary and human costs would be high to keep a permanent garrison at Gaochang, but Emperor Taizong disagreed, and he converted Gaochang into two prefectures and annexed it into his state.

In winter 640, Songsän Gampo sent his prime minister Gar Tongtsen Yülsung ("Lu Dongzan" (祿東贊) in Chinese) as an emissary to Tang, offering tributes and again requesting marriage. Emperor Taizong created a daughter of a clansman as the Princess Wencheng, and in 641 sent Li Daozong to accompany Princess Wencheng to Tibet to preside over the wedding. In winter 641, believing that Emperor Taizong was about to carry out sacrifices to heaven and earth at Mount Tai and would be unable to aid the Eastern Turks, Yinan launched a major attack on them, commanded by his son Dadu (大度). Li Simo was forced to retreat inside the Great Wall. Emperor Taizong commissioned Li Shiji, assisted by Zhang Jian (張儉), Li Daliang, Zhang Shigui (張士貴), and Li Xiyu (李襲譽), to attack Xueyantuo. Li Shiji soon defeated Dadu at Nuozhen River (諾真水, flowing through modern Baotou, Inner Mongolia), and Dadu fled.

Late reign (642–649)

 
Emperor Taizong's campaign against the oasis states

By 642, it was clear that Li Tai had ambitions on replacing his brother Li Chengqian, and the governmental officials began to be divided into pro-Li Chengqian and pro-Li Tai factions. After urging by Wei Zheng and Chu Suiliang to take actions that would clarify that Li Chengqian's position was secure, Emperor Taizong attempted to do so by making repeated statements to that effect, but his continued favoring of Li Tai led to continued speculation among officials.

Also by 642, Xueyantuo had posed a sufficiently serious threat (albeit still formally submissive) that Emperor Taizong saw two alternatives—destroying it by force or forming into a heqin relationship by marrying one of his daughters to Yinan. This particularly became an issue after the Tang general Qibi Heli (契苾何力), the chieftain of the Qibi Tribe, was kidnapped by his own subordinates and taken to Xueyantuo. In order to ransom Qibi, Emperor Taizong made a promise to eventually give his daughter Princess Xinxing to Yinan in marriage, and Yinan released Qibi. In the winter 642, an event took place in Goguryeo that would eventually precipitate wars between Tang and Goguryeo. According to Chinese accounts[20] King Yeongnyu, the king of Goguryeo, was apprehensive about his general Yeon Gaesomun and was plotting with his other officials to kill Yeon. When Yeon received the news, he started a coup and killed the king and the high level officials. He declared King Yeongnyu's nephew Go Jang (King Bojang) king, while taking power himself with the title of Dae Mangniji (Korean대막리지; Hanja大莫離支, Generalissimo). When Emperor Taizong received the news, there were suggestions that an attack be launched against Goguryeo, suggestions that Emperor Taizong initially declined.

In spring 643, Wei died, and Emperor Taizong mourned him bitterly, authoring Wei's monument himself and, prior to Wei's death, promising to give his daughter Princess Hengshan in marriage to Wei's son Wei Shuyu (魏叔玉). Later in spring, Emperor Taizong commissioned 24 portraits at Lingyan Pavilion to commemorate the 24 great contributors to his reign.

Contacts with the Byzantine Empire

 
Fanciful modern representation of the Byzantine embassy to Tang Taizong in 643 CE.
 
According to the Xi'an Stele, Emperor Taizong recognized the Nestorian Church of the East, due to efforts of the Christian missionary Alopen in 635 CE.[21]

The Old Book of Tang and New Book of Tang mention several embassies made by Fu lin (拂菻; i.e. the Byzantine Empire), which they equated with Daqin (which may refer to the Roman Empire or Middle East), beginning in 643 with an embassy sent by the king Boduoli (波多力, i.e. Constans II Pogonatos) to Emperor Taizong,[22] bearing gifts such as red glass and green gemstones.[23] These histories also provided cursory descriptions of Constantinople and its walls,[24] as well as how it was besieged by Da shi (大食; the Arabs of the Umayyad Caliphate) and their commander "Mo-yi" (摩拽; i.e. Muawiyah I, governor of Syria before becoming caliph), who forced the Byzantines to pay tribute.[23][25] Henry Yule highlights the fact that Yazdegerd III (r. 632–651), last ruler of the Sasanian Empire, sent diplomats to China for securing aid from Emperor Taizong (considered the suzerain over Ferghana in Central Asia) during the loss of the Persian heartland to the Islamic Rashidun Caliphate, which may have also prompted the Byzantines to send envoys to China amid their recent loss of Syria to the Muslims.[26] Tang Chinese sources also recorded how Sassanid prince Peroz III (636–679) fled to Tang China following the conquest of Persia by the growing Islamic caliphate.[27]

The expansion of China's power into Central Asia under Emperor Taizong seems to have been noticed in the West. Theophylact Simocatta, a Byzantine Greek historian during the reign of Heraclius (r. 610–641), wrote that Taugast (or Taugas; Old Turkic: Tabghach, from Tuoba, the Xianbei clan of Northern Wei),[28] was a great eastern empire in the Far East that ruled over Turkic people, with a capital city roughly 1,500 miles northeast from India that he called Khubdan (from the Turkic word Khumdan, meaning, Chang'an), where idolatry was practiced but the people were wise and lived by just laws.[29] He depicted the Chinese empire as being divided by a great river (i.e. the Yangzi) that served as the boundary between two rival states at war, yet during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Maurice (582–602 AD) the northerners wearing "black coats" conquered the "red coats" of the south (black being a distinctive color worn by the people of Shaanxi, location of the Sui capital Sui Chang'an, according to the 16th-century Persian traveler Hajji Mahomed, or Chaggi Memet).[30] This account may correspond to the conquest of the Chen dynasty and reunification of China by Emperor Wen of Sui (r. 581–604).[30] Simocatta names their ruler as Taisson, which he claimed meant Son of God, either correlating to the Chinese Tianzi (i.e. Son of Heaven) or even the name of the contemporary ruler Emperor Taizong.[31]

Succession dispute

Also in 643, Emperor Taizong would see major turmoil among his own closest family. In spring 643, his son Li You (李祐) the Prince of Qi, angry over restrictions that his secretary general Quan Wanji (權萬紀) had often placed on him, killed Quan and declared a rebellion. Emperor Taizong sent Li Shiji against Li You, but before Li Shiji could engage Li You, Li You was captured by his own subordinate Du Xingmin (杜行敏) and delivered to Chang'an, where Emperor Taizong ordered him to commit suicide and executed 44 of his associates.

The death of Li You drew out news of another plot. Li Chengqian, who had been fearful that Emperor Taizong would eventually remove him and replace him with Li Tai, had begun to conspire with Hou Junji, Li Yuanchang (李元昌) the Prince of Han (Emperor Taizong's brother), the general Li Anyan (李安儼), and his brothers-in-law Zhao Jie (趙節) and Du He (杜荷, Du Ruhui's son) to overthrow Emperor Taizong. During the investigations in the aftermaths of Li You's rebellion, one of the co-conspirators, Li Chengqian's guard Gegan Chengji (紇干承基), was implicated by association, and in order to save himself, he revealed Li Chengqian's plot. Emperor Taizong was shocked by the news, and he appointed Zhangsun Wuji, Fang Xuanling, Xiao Yu, and Li Shiji, along with the officials in charge of the supreme court and the legislative and examination bureaus of the government to carry out a joint investigation. At the suggestion of the mid-level official Lai Ji, Emperor Taizong deposed, but did not kill, Li Chengqian, while ordering Li Yuanchang to commit suicide and executing Hou Junji, Li Anyan, Zhao, and Du.

Taizong's eldest son Li Chengqian chose to speak Turkic, dress in Turkic clothes and even set up a tent in his residence in imitation of a Turkic khan. Taizong removed him from the position of heir apparent and chose as his successor Li Zhi, who embraced Han Chinese cultural heritage.[32]

After Li Chengqian was deposed, Emperor Taizong briefly promised Li Tai that he would be made crown prince. However, as the investigations continued, Emperor Taizong came to the belief that Li Chengqian's downfall was driven by Li Tai's machinations, and therefore resolved to depose Li Tai as well. At Zhangsun's suggestion, Emperor Taizong created a younger son, Li Zhi the Prince of Jin (who, like Li Chengqian and Li Tai, were born of Empress Zhangsun), crown prince, who was considered kinder and gentler, while exiling Li Chengqian and Li Tai. However, starting later that year, Emperor Taizong began to doubt whether Li Zhi's personality was sufficiently strong to serve as emperor, and he toyed with the idea of making another son, Li Ke the Prince of Wu, a son of his concubine Consort Yang (Emperor Yang of Sui's daughter), crown prince, but did not do so due to strong opposition by Zhangsun Wuji.

Meanwhile, coming to the belief that he made an ill-advised promise to Yinan to give him Princess Xinxing in marriage, Emperor Taizong demanded a large amount of bride price – 50,000 horses, 10,000 cows and camels, and 100,000 sheep—a price that Yinan agreed to, but could not immediately collect and deliver. Emperor Taizong used it as an excuse to cancel the marriage agreement. Meanwhile, as Wei Zheng had, prior to his death, recommended Hou Junji and Li Chengqian's staff member Du Zhenglun as chancellors, Emperor Taizong came to suspect that Wei was part of the plot as well. He destroyed the monument he had authored for Wei and cancelled the betrothal between Wei Shuyu and Princess Hengshan.

Campaign against the Karasahr

In 644, with Yanqi's king Long Tuqizhi (龍突騎支), who had assisted the Tang campaign to conquer Gaochang, turning against Tang and allying with the Western Turks, Emperor Taizong sent the general Guo Xiaoke (郭孝恪), the commandant at Anxi (安西, i.e., Gaochang) to launch a surprise attack on Yanqi. Guo caught Long Tuqizhi by surprise and captured him, making his brother Long Lipozhun (龍栗婆準) regent. (The Western Turkic viceroy Ashina Quli (阿史那屈利) subsequently captured Long Lipozhun and briefly occupied Yanqi, although he then, not wanting a direct confrontation with Tang, withdrew, and the Yanqi nobles made Long Tuqizhi's cousin Long Xuepoanazhi (龍薛婆阿那支) king.)

Goguryeo-Tang War

 
The Sui dynasty tried to invade Goguryeo in 598, 612, 613 & 614. Taizong campaign (map) was in 645. Gaozong's campaigns were in 661, 667 & 668.

Also in 644, with Goguryeo attacking Silla and Silla requesting aid, Emperor Taizong decided to prepare for a campaign to conquer Goguryeo. He arrested the emissaries that Yeon sent to the Tang court, accusing them of disloyalty to King Yeongnyu. By winter 644, the mobilization was in full force. (Apparently because of Tang's preparation to attack Goguryeo, however, the reconstituted Eastern Turkic people, fearing an attack from Xueyantuo at a time that Tang would be ill-equipped to assist, panicked and abandoned their khan Li Simo, fleeing into Tang territory. Emperor Taizong reabsorbed the Eastern Turks into Tang, while making Li Simo a general in his army.)

In spring 645, Emperor Taizong departed from Luoyang and led the troops northeast, behind a vanguard of 60,000 commanded by Li Shiji and Li Daozong. At the same time, Zhang Liang led the other 40,000 from sea. By summer 645, Tang forces had captured Yodong Fortress (遼東, in modern Liaoyang, Liaoning), and headed southeast toward the Goguryeo capital Pyongyang. Emperor Taizong personally led about 30,000 Tang and tribal forces and defeated a 150,000 force commanded by two Gogureyo generals and then put Ansi (安市, in modern Anshan, Liaoning) fortress under siege.[33]

However, the capable defense put up by Ansi's commanding general stymied Tang forces and, in late fall, after suffering some casualties, with winter fast approaching and his food supplies running out, Emperor Taizong withdrew. He much regretted launching the campaign and made the comment, "If Wei Zheng were still alive, he would never have let me launch this campaign." He reerected the monument he authored for Wei and summoned Wei's wife and children to meet him, treating them well.

Campaign against Xueyantuo and conquest of the Kucha

Meanwhile, in the aftermaths of the Goguryeo campaign, Xueyantuo's Duomi Khan Bazhuo (son of Yinan, who had died earlier in 645) launched attacks against Tang's border prefectures, with largely inconclusive results. In spring 646, the Tang generals Qiao Shiwang (喬師望) and Zhishi Sili counterattacked, defeating Bazhuo's forces, causing him to flee. His vassals Huige, Pugu (僕骨), and Tongluo (同羅) tribes took the opportunity to rebel and attack him. Hearing this, Emperor Taizong launched a major attack, commanded by Li Daozong, Ashina She'er (阿史那社爾), Zhishi Sili, Qibi Heli, Xue Wanche, and Zhang Jian, against Xueyantuo. With Xueyantuo under attack from multiple sides, Bazhuo was killed by Huige forces, and the remaining Xueyantuo people fled and supported Bazhuo's cousin Duomozhi as Yitewushi Khan, but soon offered to submit to Tang. Emperor Taizong sent Li Shiji toward Duomozhi's location, with the direction to either accept his submission or destroy him. Duomozhi surrendered and was taken to Chang'an, ending Xueyantuo's rule over the region. The other tribes formerly submissive to Xueyantuo offered Emperor Taizong the title of "Heavenly Khan" and thereafter largely became submissive to Tang.[d][35] Tang nominally established seven command posts and six prefectures over the region. (Huige's khan Yaoluoge Tumidu (藥羅葛吐迷度), while submissive to Tang, for some time tried to take control over the region himself, but was subsequently assassinated in 648, and there would be no other organized attempt by Huige to take over the region until for about another century.)

 
A bas-relief of a soldier and horse with elaborate saddle and stirrups, from the tomb of Emperor Taizong, c. 650. The relief shown here depicts "Autumn Dew," also known as "Whirlwind Victory" and is housed at the Penn Museum in Philadelphia, PA.

After the victory over Xueyantuo, Emperor Taizong again turned his attention toward to Goguryeo, cutting off relations once more and considering another campaign. Under suggestions by some of his officials, he decided to launch harassment campaigns against Goguryeo's northern region on a yearly basis, to weaken Goguryeo gradually. The first of these campaigns was launched in spring 647, with Li Shiji and Niu Jinda in command, and would reoccur. All this was in preparation of another campaign in 649 with forces totaling 300,000, but Taizong died before this campaign and the campaign was stalled into Gaozong's reign.

In 648, Emperor Taizong launched another campaign, commanded by Ashina She'er, aimed at Qiuzi, but first attacking Yanqi and killing Long Xuepoanazhi and replacing him with his cousin Long Xiannazhun (龍先那準). Ashina She'er advanced on Qiuzi and captured its king Bai Helibushibi (白訶黎布失畢), making his brother king instead.

Death

By summer of 649, Emperor Taizong was seriously ill—with some believing that his illness was caused by the medicine he was administered by Buddhists[36] or his taking of pills given to him by alchemists. Believing Li Shiji to be capable but fearing that he would not be submissive to Li Zhi, he demoted Li Shiji out of the capital to be the commandant at remote Die Prefecture (疊州, roughly modern Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu), with instructions to Li Zhi that if Li Shiji hesitated, to execute him immediately, and if he did not, to recall him after Emperor Taizong's death and make him chancellor. Li Shiji, when receiving the order and realizing that his life was at stake, immediately departed for Die Prefecture. (After Emperor Taizong's death, Li Zhi would indeed recall Li Shiji and make him chancellor.) Soon thereafter, Emperor Taizong, after entrusting Li Zhi to Zhangsun Wuji and Chu Suiliang, died at his summer palace Cuiwei Palace (翠微宮). His death was initially kept a secret, and three days later, after his casket had been returned to Chang'an, his death was announced, and Li Zhi took the throne as Emperor Gaozong.

Monuments

After consolidating the Tang Empire, Emperor Taizong ordered six large stone panels, known as Zhaoling Liujun (昭陵六駿), to be carved with the portraits of his favorite horses. These were the horses he had ridden in overcoming his rivals and securing the borders of the country.

Since I engaged in military campaigns, those war chargers which carried me rushing on the enemy and breaking the line, and which rescued me from perils, their true images should be portrayed on stone and be placed left and right of my tomb to demonstrate the righteousness of "curtain and cover."[37]

Emperor Taizong further composed laudatory poems for each of the six horses depicted in the stone reliefs. Constructed between 636 and 649 CE, the stone reliefs "exemplify the beauty of early Tang sculpture; the images are realistic yet powerful, created with simplicity and matured craftsmanship."[38]

After Taizong's death, the monuments were situated along the east and west sides of the "spirit path" at the North Gate of the tomb complex named Zhaoling or Zhao Mausoleum.[39] The six stone horse reliefs remained at the Mausoleum until the early twentieth century, when four were removed to the Beilin Museum in Xi'an, China and two were sold and subsequently donated to the Penn Museum in Philadelphia in 1921.[40]

Era name

Chancellors during reign

Name In office Notes
Xiao Yu (626, 627, 630, 643–646)
Chen Shuda (626)
Feng Deyi (626–627)
Yuwen Shiji (626–627)
Gao Shilian (626–627, 638–647)
Fang Xuanling (626–643, 643–648)
Zhangsun Wuji (627–628, 645–649)
Du Yan (627–628)
Du Ruhui (628–629)
Li Jing (628–634)
Wang Gui (628–633)
Wei Zheng (629–642)
Wen Yanbo (630–637)
Dai Zhou (630–633)
Hou Junji (630–632, 632–643)
Yang Shidao (636–643, 645)
Liu Ji (639–645)
Cen Wenben (642–645)
Li Shiji (643–649)
Zhang Liang (643–646)
Ma Zhou (644–648)
Chu Suiliang (644–647, 648–649)
Xu Jingzong (645) [e]
Gao Jifu (645) [e]
Zhang Xingcheng (645) [e]
Cui Renshi (648)

Family

Consorts and Issue:

  • Empress Wende, of the Zhangsun clan of Henan (文德皇后 河南長孫氏; 601–636)
    • Li Chengqian, Prince Min of Hengshan (恆山愍王 李承乾; 618–645), first son
    • Li Tai, Prince Gong of Pu (濮恭王 李泰; 620–653), fourth son
    • Princess Changle (長樂公主; 621–643), personal name Lizhi (麗質), fifth daughter
      • Married Zhangsun Chong of Henan (河南 長孫衝), a son of Zhangsun Wuji, in 633, and had issue (one son)
    • Li Zhi, Gaozong (高宗 李治; 628–683), ninth son
    • Princess Chengyang (城陽公主; 630–671), personal name Yuemao (月貌), sixteenth daughter
      • Married Du He of Jingzhao, Duke Xiangyang (京兆 杜荷; 616–643), a son of Du Ruhui
      • Married Xue Guan of Hedong (河東 薛瓘) in 643, and had issue (two sons)
    • Princess Jinyang (晉陽公主; 633–644), personal name Mingda (明达)
    • Princess Xincheng (新城公主; 634–663), personal name Zi (字), twenty-first daughter
      • Married Zhangsun Quan of Henan (河南 長孫詮; 636–659) in 649
      • Married Wei Zhengju of Jingzhao (京兆 韋正矩; d. 663) in 660
  • Noble Consort, of the Wei clan of Jingzhao (貴妃 京兆韋氏; 597–665), personal name Gui ()
    • Princess Linchuan (臨川公主; 624–682), personal name Mengjiang (孟姜), tenth daughter
      • Married Zhou Daowu of Runan, Duke Qiao (汝南 周道務), and had issue (three sons, two daughters)
    • Li Shen, Prince of Ji (紀王 李慎; 629–689), tenth son
  • Noble Consort, of the Yang clan (貴妃 楊氏)
    • Li Fu, Prince of Zhao (趙王 李福; 634–670), 13th son
  • Consort, of the Yang clan (妃 楊氏)
    • Li Ke, Prince of Wu (吳王 李恪; 619–653), third son
    • Li Yin, Prince Dao of Shu (蜀悼王 李愔; 621–667), sixth son
  • Consort, of the Yin clan (妃 陰氏)
    • Li You, Prince of Qi (齊王 李佑; 621–643), fifth son
  • Virtuous Consort, of the Yan clan (德妃 燕氏; 609–671)
    • Li Zhen, Prince Jing of Yue (越敬王 李貞; 627–688), eighth son
    • Li Xiao, Prince Shang of Jiang (江殤王 李囂; 630–632), 11th son
  • Able Consort, of the Zheng clan (賢妃 郑氏)
  • Able Consort, of the Xu clan (賢妃 徐氏; 627–650), personal name Hui ()
  • Lady of Bright Countenance, of the Wei clan (昭容 韋氏), personal name Nizi (尼子)
  • Imperial Concubine, of a certain clan (下嫔某氏)
    • Princess Yuzhang (豫章公主; 621–642), sixth daughter
      • Married Tang Yishi (唐義識), a son of Tang Jian, in 637, and had issue (one son)
  • Beauty, of the Xiao clan (美人 萧氏)
  • Talented Lady, of the Wu clan; 624–705, personal name Mei (媚), known commonly as Empress Wu Zetian
  • Talented Lady, of the Cui clan of Qinghe (才人 清河崔氏)
  • Talented Lady, of the Xiao clan (才人 萧氏)
  • Princess consort, of the Yang clan of Hongnong (王妃 弘農楊氏)[42]
    • Li Ming, Prince Gong of Cao (曹恭王 李明; d. 682), 14th son
  • Lady, of the Wang clan (王氏)
    • Li Yun, Prince of Jiang (蔣王 李惲; d. 674), seventh son
  • Lady, of the Gao clan (高氏)
  • Unknown
    • Li Kuan, Prince Chu (楚王 李寬; b. 619), second son
    • Li Jian, Prince Dai (代王 李簡; 631), 12th son
    • Princess Xiangcheng (襄城公主; d. 651), first daughter
      • Married Xiao Rui of Lanling, Duke Song (蘭陵 蕭銳), a son of Xiao Yu
    • Princess Runan (汝南公主; d. 636), third daughter
    • Princess Nanping (南平公主; d. 650), third daughter
      • Married Wang Jingzhi, Baron Nancheng (王敬直), the youngest son of Wang Gui, in 637
      • Married Liu Xuanyi of Henan, Duke Yu (河南 劉玄意) in 643
    • Princess Sui'an (遂安公主; d. 651), fourth daughter
      • Married Dou Kui of Henan, Baron Xindou (河南 竇逵)
      • Married Wang Dali (王大禮; 613–669), and had issue (one son)
    • Princess Baling (巴陵公主; d. 653), seventh daughter
      • Married Chai Lingwu, Duke Xiangyang (柴令武; d. 653), the second son of Chai Shao
    • Princess Pu'an (普安公主), eighth daughter
      • Married Shi Renbiao, Duke Dou (史仁表)
    • Princess Dongyang (東陽公主; d. 701), ninth daughter
      • Married Gao Lüxing of Bohai, Duke Shen (渤海 高履行), the first son of Gao Shilian
    • Princess Qinghe (清河公主; 624–664), personal name Jing (), 11th daughter
      • Married Cheng Huailiang, Duke Dong'a (程懷亮), the second son of Cheng Zhijie, in 633
    • Princess Lanling (蘭陵公主; 628–659), personal name Shu (), 19th daughter
      • Married Dou Huaizhe of Henan (河南 竇懷悊) in 636, and had issue (one daughter)
    • Princess Jin'an (晉安公主), 13th daughter
      • Married Wei Si'an of Jingzhao (京兆 韋思安)
      • Married Yang Renlu of Hongnong (弘農 楊仁輅)
    • Princess Ankang (安康公主), 14th daughter
      • Married Dugu Mou of Henan (河南 獨孤謀) in 643
    • Princess Xinxing (新興公主), 15th daughter
      • Married Zhangsun Xi of Henan (河南 長孫曦)
    • Princess Gaoyang (高陽公主; d. 653)
      • Married Fang Yi'ai of Qinghe (清河 房遺愛; d. 653), a son of Fang Xuanling, in 648
    • Princess Jinshan (金山公主), 18th daughter
    • Princess Changshan (常山公主), 20th daughter

Ancestry

Li Tianxi
Li Hu
Lady Jia
Li Bing (d. 573)
Empress Jinglie
Emperor Gaozu of Tang (566–635)
Dugu Kuzhe
Dugu Xin (503–557)
Lady Feilian
Empress Yuanzhen
Emperor Taizong of Tang (598–649)
Dou Lüe
Dou Yue
Dou Yi (519–583)
Empress Taimu (569–613)
Yuwen Gong (470–526)
Yuwen Tai (507–556)
Empress Mingde
Princess Xiangyang

Literary and other cultural references

  • Emperor Taizong was the subject of a 64-chapter (in eight volumes) The Novel of the Prince of Qin of the Great Tang (大唐秦王詞話 Datang Qin Wang Cihua) by Zhu Shenglin of the Ming Dynasty. The novel is also known as The Biography of the Prince of Qin of the Tang Dynasty (唐秦王本傳), Romance of Tang (唐傳演義), and Romance of the Prince of Qin (秦王演義).
  • Journey to the West details a fictional account of the origin of the Chinese door gods. Emperor Taizong asked his generals Qin Shubao and Yuchi Gong to stand guard outside his bedroom to protect him from a vengeful spirit.

Television/Cinema

See also

References

  1. ^ Volume 191 of Zizhi Tongjian recorded that Taizong assumed the throne on the jiazi day of the 8th month of the 9th year of the Wude era of Tang Gaozu's reign. This date corresponds to 4 Sep 626 on the Gregorian calendar. [(武德九年八月)甲子,太宗即皇帝位于东宫显德殿...]
  2. ^ Directory of historical figures. Pasadena: Salem Press. 2000. p. 613. ISBN 978-0-89356-334-9.
  3. ^ Picken, Laurence E.R.; Nickson, Noël J., eds. (2007). Music from the Tang Court. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-521-62100-7.
  4. ^ Sen, Tansen (2003). Buddhism, diplomacy, and trade. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-8248-2593-5.
  5. ^ McNair, Amy (2007). Donors of Longmen: Faith, politics and patronage in medieval Chinese Buddhist sculpture. Honolulu: University of Hawaii press. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-8248-2994-0.
  6. ^ New Book of Tang, vol. 13.
  7. ^ Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 282.
  8. ^ "万方数据知识服务平台". d.wanfangdata.com.cn. doi:10.3969/j.issn.1004-3381.2019.08.062. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  9. ^ Zizhi Tongjian, Scroll 249.
  10. ^ a b Wechsler, Howard J.; Twitchett, Dennis C. (1979). Denis C. Twitchett; John K. Fairbank (eds.). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 3: Sui and T'ang China, 589–906, Part I. Cambridge University Press. pp. 225–227. ISBN 978-0-521-21446-9.
  11. ^ CHofC, vol.3, p.189.
  12. ^ Bo Yang, Outlines of the History of Chinese, vol. 2, pp. 495–499.
  13. ^ Jack W. Chen, The Poetics of Sovereignty: On Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty, pp.14
  14. ^ Victor Cunrui Xiong (2009), Historical Dictionary of Medieval China, Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras, No. 19. Edited by John Woronoff. Lanham, Toronto, Plymouth: The Scarecrow Press, p. 26, ISBN 0-8108-6053-8.
  15. ^ Xiong (2006), pp. 63–4.
  16. ^ Poon, Vincent (10 February 2017). "The Emperor's Preface to the Sacred Teachings". Vincent's Calligraphy. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  17. ^ Chua, Amy (2007). Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance–and Why They Fall (1st ed.). New York: Doubleday. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-385-51284-8. OCLC 123079516.
  18. ^ Patricia Buckley Ebrey (2010). The Cambridge Illustrated History of China. Cambridge University Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-521-12433-1.
  19. ^ Jonathan Karem Skaff (2009). Nicola Di Cosmo (ed.). Military Culture in Imperial China. Harvard University Press. pp. 183–185. ISBN 978-0-674-03109-8.
  20. ^ See, e.g., Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 196.
  21. ^ Jenkins, Peter (2008). The Lost History of Christianity: the Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia – and How It Died. New York: Harper Collins. pp. 65. ISBN 978-0-06-147280-0.
  22. ^ Adshead (1995), pp. 104–106.
  23. ^ a b Hirth, Friedrich (2000) [1885]. Jerome S. Arkenberg (ed.). "East Asian History Sourcebook: Chinese Accounts of Rome, Byzantium and the Middle East, c. 91 B.C.E. – 1643 C.E." Fordham.edu. Fordham University. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  24. ^ Ball (2016), pp. 152–153, see endnote 114.
  25. ^ Yule (1915), pp. 48–49.
  26. ^ Yule (1915), pp. 54–55.
  27. ^ Schafer (1985), pp. 10, 25–26.
  28. ^ Luttwak (2009), p. 168.
  29. ^ Yule (1915), pp 29–31; footnote No. 3 on p. 31.
  30. ^ a b Yule (1915), p. 30; footnote No. 2 on p. 30.
  31. ^ Yule (1915), p 29; footnote No. 4 on p. 29.
  32. ^ The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. 2010. p. 273.
  33. ^ Liu 劉, Xu 昫 (945). 舊唐書 [Old Book of Tang]. Vol. 3. Emperor Taizong. According to the Old book of Tang, the number of soldiers in Battle of Zhubi (駐蹕之戰) was different, with 40000 Tang soldiers against over 100000 Goguryeo troops allied with Mohe (靺鞨) tribes.
  34. ^ Kenneth Scott Latourette (1964). The Chinese, Their History and Culture, Vols. 1–2 (4th ed., reprint ed.). Macmillan. p. 144. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
  35. ^ Drompp 2005, p. 126.
  36. ^ Chua, Amy (2007). Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance–and Why They Fall (1st ed.). New York: Doubleday. pp. 70, 71. ISBN 978-0-385-51284-8. OCLC 123079516.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  37. ^ Wang, Qinruo (1960). 冊府元龜 [Premier tortoise in the storehouse of books]. Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company.
  38. ^ Xiuquin Zhou, http://www.sino-platonic.org/complete/spp187_taizong_emperor.pdf "Zhaoling:The Mausoleum of Emperor Tang Taizong" 'Sino-Platonic Papers', No. 187, April 2009, p. 140.
  39. ^ Xiuquin Zhou, http://www.sino-platonic.org/complete/spp187_taizong_emperor.pdf "Zhaoling:The Mausoleum of Emperor Tang Taizong" 'Sino-Platonic Papers', No. 187, April 2009
  40. ^ Bishop, Charles W. "Horses of T'ang T'ai Tsung.", 'The Museum Journal' Volume IX (Nos. 3–4) : Page/Fig./Plate: 265–272, figs. 75, 76, 1918
  41. ^ vol. 61.
  42. ^ She was the wife of Emperor Taizong's full brother, Li Yuanji
  1. ^ Given in final version as of 754.
  2. ^ [ Listen ]
  3. ^ His status as co-founder on par with Gaozu appeared certain by the time the Southern Tang, which claimed inheritance of Tang heritage, was established, as its founding emperor Emperor Liezu (Li Bian) recognized that status by treating Emperors Gaozu and Taizong, as well as his adoptive father Xu Wen, all as founders of his state.[7]
  4. ^ "...territories within his empire. He took the title "Heavenly Khan," thus designating himself as their ruler. A little later the Western Turks, although then at the height of their power, were badly defeated, and the Uighurs, a Turkish tribe, were detached from them and became sturdy supporters of the T'ang in the Gobi. The Khitan, Mongols in Eastern Mongolia and Southern Manchuria, made their submission (630). In the Tarim basin..."[34]
  5. ^ a b c Xu Jingzong, Gao Jifu, and Zhang Xingcheng were referred to as de facto chancellors by the New Book of Tang,[41] but this appeared to be a temporary measure during the Goguryeo campaign with Emperor Taizong out of Tang territory and Li Zhi in charge temporarily. Xu, Gao, Zhang (each of whom would be later made chancellor) were not again referred to as chancellors until they were made chancellors after Emperor Taizong's death, even though they were not explicitly removed.

Bibliography

  • Adshead, S. A. M. (1995) [1988], China in World History (2nd ed.), New York: Palgrave Macmillan and St. Martin's Press, ISBN 978-0-333-62132-5
  • Andrade, Tonio (2016), The Gunpowder Age: China, Military Innovation, and the Rise of the West in World History, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-13597-7.
  • Asimov, M.S. (1998), History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume IV The age of achievement: A.D. 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Part One The historical, social and economic setting, UNESCO Publishing
  • Ball, Warwick (2016), Rome in the East: Transformation of an Empire (2nd ed.), London: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-72078-6
  • Barfield, Thomas (1989), The Perilous Frontier: Nomadic Empires and China, Basil Blackwell
  • Barrett, Timothy Hugh (2008), The Woman Who Discovered Printing, Great Britain: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-12728-7 (alk. paper)
  • Beckwith, Christopher I (1987), The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia: A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans, Turks, Arabs, and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages, Princeton University Press
  • Bregel, Yuri (2003), An Historical Atlas of Central Asia, Brill
  • Drompp, Michael Robert (2005), Tang China and the Collapse of the Uighur Empire: A Documentary History, Brill
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999), The Cambridge Illustrated History of China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-66991-X (paperback).
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley; Walthall, Anne; Palais, James B. (2006), East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, ISBN 0-618-13384-4
  • Golden, Peter B. (1992), An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples: Ethnogenesis and State-Formation in Medieval and Early Modern Eurasia and the Middle East, OTTO HARRASSOWITZ · WIESBADEN
  • Graff, David A. (2002), Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300–900, Warfare and History, London: Routledge, ISBN 0415239559
  • Graff, David Andrew (2016), The Eurasian Way of War Military Practice in Seventh-Century China and Byzantium, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-46034-7.
  • Haywood, John (1998), Historical Atlas of the Medieval World, AD 600-1492, Barnes & Noble
  • Latourette, Kenneth Scott (1964), The Chinese, their history and culture, Volumes 1-2, Macmillan
  • Lorge, Peter A. (2008), The Asian Military Revolution: from Gunpowder to the Bomb, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-60954-8
  • Luttwak, Edward N. (2009), The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
  • Millward, James (2009), Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang, Columbia University Press
  • Needham, Joseph (1986), Science & Civilisation in China, vol. V:7: The Gunpowder Epic, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-30358-3
  • Rong, Xinjiang (2013), Eighteen Lectures on Dunhuang, Brill
  • Schafer, Edward H. (1985), The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A study of T'ang Exotics, University of California Press
  • Shaban, M. A. (1979), The ʿAbbāsid Revolution, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-29534-3
  • Sima, Guang (2015), 柏楊版資治通鑑54皇后失蹤, Yuǎnliú chūbǎnshìyè gǔfèn yǒuxiàn gōngsī, ISBN 978-957-32-0876-1
  • Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2012), Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors: Culture, Power, and Connections, 580-800 (Oxford Studies in Early Empires), Oxford University Press
  • Twitchett, Denis C. (1979), The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 3, Sui and T'ang China, 589–906, Cambridge University Press
  • Wang, Zhenping (2013), Tang China in Multi-Polar Asia: A History of Diplomacy and War, University of Hawaii Press
  • Wilkinson, Endymion (2015). Chinese History: A New Manual, 4th edition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center distributed by Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674088467.
  • Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2000), Sui-Tang Chang'an: A Study in the Urban History of Late Medieval China (Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies), U OF M CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES, ISBN 0892641371
  • Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2006), Emperor Yang of the Sui Dynasty: His Life, Times, and Legacy, Albany: State University of New York Press, ISBN 9780791482681.
  • Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2009), Historical Dictionary of Medieval China, United States of America: Scarecrow Press, Inc., ISBN 978-0810860537
  • Xu, Elina-Qian (2005), Historical Development of the Pre-Dynastic Khitan, Institute for Asian and African Studies 7
  • Xue, Zongzheng (1992), Turkic peoples, 中国社会科学出版社
  • Yuan, Shu (2001), 柏楊版通鑑記事本末28第二次宦官時代, Yuǎnliú chūbǎnshìyè gǔfèn yǒuxiàn gōngsī, ISBN 957-32-4273-7
  • Yule, Henry (1915), Cathay and the Way Thither: Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China, Vol I: Preliminary Essay on the Intercourse Between China and the Western Nations Previous to the Discovery of the Cape Route, Hakluyt Society

Further reading

  • Old Book of Tang, vols. 2, 3.
  • New Book of Tang, vol. 2.
  • Zizhi Tongjian, vols. 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199.
  • Hirth, Friedrich (2000) [1885]. Jerome S. Arkenberg (ed.). "East Asian History Sourcebook: Chinese Accounts of Rome, Byzantium and the Middle East, c. 91 B.C.E. – 1643 C.E." Fordham.edu. Fordham University. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  • Luttwak, Edward N. (2009). The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire. Cambridge and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03519-5.
  • Schafer, Edward H. (1985) [1963], The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A study of T'ang Exotics (1st paperback ed.), Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-05462-8.
  • Twitchett, Dennis, ed. (1979). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 3: Sui and T'ang China, 589–906 AD, Part 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-21446-9. See especially : Ch.4, T'ai-tsung (626–49) the Consolidator. p. 150 to 241.
  • Yule, Henry (1915). Henri Cordier (ed.), Cathay and the Way Thither: Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China, Vol I: Preliminary Essay on the Intercourse Between China and the Western Nations Previous to the Discovery of the Cape Route. London: Hakluyt Society. Accessed 21 September 2016.

External links

Emperor Taizong of Tang
Born: 28 January 598 Died: 10 July 649
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of the Tang dynasty
626–649
Succeeded by
Emperor of China (most regions)
626–649
Preceded by
Liang Shidu (Emperor of Liang)
Emperor of China (Northern Shaanxi/Western Inner Mongolia)
628–649

emperor, taizong, tang, confused, with, emperor, taizong, song, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2020, learn, w. Not to be confused with Emperor Taizong of Song This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Emperor Taizong of Tang 28 January 598 10 July 649 previously Prince of Qin personal name Li Shimin was the second emperor of the Tang dynasty of China ruling from 626 to 649 He is traditionally regarded as a co founder of the dynasty for his role in encouraging Li Yuan his father to rebel against the Sui dynasty at Jinyang in 617 Taizong subsequently played a pivotal role in defeating several of the dynasty s most dangerous opponents and solidifying its rule over China 6 c Emperor Taizong of Tang 唐太宗Huangdi 皇帝 Khan of HeavenPortrait of Emperor Taizong of Tang on a hanging scroll created during the Ming dynasty era kept in the National Palace Museum Taipei TaiwanEmperor of ChinaReign4 September 626 1 10 July 649PredecessorEmperor GaozuSuccessorEmperor GaozongBorn28 January 598 2 Qingshan Palace 3 in Wugong 4 Sui ChinaDied10 July 649 aged 51 5 Cuiwei Palace in Chang an Tang ChinaBurialZhao MausoleumConsortsEmpress Wende m 613 died 636 IssueSee FamilyNamesFamily name Li 李 Given name Shimin 世民 Era name and datesZhenguan 貞觀 4 September 626 10 July 649Posthumous nameShort Wen Huangdi 文皇帝 Full Wen Wu Dasheng Daguang Xiao Huangdi a 文武大聖大廣孝皇帝 b Temple nameTaizong 太宗 HouseHouse of LiFatherEmperor GaozuMotherEmpress TaimuTang TaizongChinese唐太宗Literal meaning Great Ancestor of the Tang TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTang TaizōngWade GilesT ang2 T ai4 tsung1IPA tʰa ŋ tʰa ɪ tsʊ ŋ Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationTohng TaaijungIPA tʰɔ ːŋ tʰa ːitso ŋ Qin WangChinese秦王Literal meaningKing of QinTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinQin WangYue CantoneseYale RomanizationCheuhn WohngLi ShiminChinese李世民TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinLǐ ShiminIPA li ʂɨ mi n Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationLeih SaimahnTaizong is considered to be one of the greatest emperors in China s history and henceforth his reign became regarded as the exemplary model against which all future emperors were measured His era the Reign of Zhenguan Chinese 貞觀之治 pinyin Zhenguan Zhi Zhi is considered a golden age in ancient Chinese history and was treated as required studying material for future crown princes Taizong continued to develop imperial examination systems He asked his officers to become loyal to the policies not people in order to eliminate corruption 8 Under the Zhenguan era Tang China flourished economically and militarily For more than a century after his death China enjoyed prosperity and peace brought about by the solidification of imperial protection over the Chinese regions In territorial extent it covered most of the territories previously held by the Han dynasty and parts of modern Korea Vietnam Russia Mongolia Xinjiang and Central Asian regions This era of consolidation and conquest laid the foundation for Xuanzong s reign which is considered to be the height of the Tang dynasty In 630 Emperor Taizong sent his general Li Jing against the Eastern Turks defeating and capturing their Jiali Khan Ashina Duobi and destroying their power This made Tang the dominant power in East and Central Asia and Emperor Taizong subsequently took the title of Tengeri Qaghan Chinese 天可汗 pinyin Tian Kehan Wade Giles T ien K ehan Tenger Khan or the God like Emperor 9 He also launched a series of campaigns against the oasis states of the Tarim Basin and against the armies of their main ally the Western Turks During his reign Tang armies annexed Karakhoja in 640 Karasahr in 644 and Kucha in 648 10 Eventually the Tang defeated and annexed the Western Gokturk khaganate after Su Dingfang defeated Qaghan Ashina Helu in 657 Unlike much of the nobility in his time Emperor Taizong was a frank rationalist and scholar of logic and scientific reason openly scorning superstitions and claims of signs from the heavens He also modified important rites in order to ease the burden of agricultural labour 11 The modern Chinese historian Bo Yang opined that Emperor Taizong achieved greatness by enduring criticism which others would find difficult to accept whilst trying hard not to abuse his absolute power using Emperor Yang of Sui as a negative example as well as through his employment of capable chancellors such as Fang Xuanling Du Ruhui and Wei Zheng Emperor Taizong s wife Empress Zhangsun also proved to be a capable assistant 12 Contents 1 Early life 2 Participation in the rebellion against Sui rule 3 During Emperor Gaozu s reign 3 1 Campaign to reunify the empire 3 2 Struggle against Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji 4 As emperor 4 1 Early reign 626 633 4 1 1 Li Yi s Rebellion 4 1 2 Campaign against the Eastern Turks 4 2 Middle reign 634 641 4 2 1 Campaign against Tuyuhun 4 2 2 Treatment of Noble Clan 4 2 3 Tibetan attack on Songzhou 4 2 4 Campaign against Western Turks 4 3 Late reign 642 649 4 3 1 Contacts with the Byzantine Empire 4 3 2 Succession dispute 4 3 3 Campaign against the Karasahr 4 3 4 Goguryeo Tang War 4 3 5 Campaign against Xueyantuo and conquest of the Kucha 5 Death 6 Monuments 7 Era name 8 Chancellors during reign 9 Family 10 Ancestry 11 Literary and other cultural references 11 1 Television Cinema 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life EditLǐ Shimin was born in 598 at Wugong in modern Xianyang Shaanxi 13 His father Li Yuan the Duke of Tang was a general of the Sui Dynasty and a nephew by marriage to Sui s founding emperor Emperor Wen Li Shimin s grandmother Duchess Dugu was a sister of Empress Dugu both of whom were daughters of Dugu Xin a major Xianbei general during Sui s predecessor dynasty Northern Zhou 14 Li Shimin s mother Li Yuan s wife Duchess Dou was a daughter of Dou Yi 竇毅 the Duke of Shenwu and his wife Northern Zhou s Princess Xiangyang Duchess Dou bore Li Yuan four sons an older brother to Li Shimin Li Jiancheng and two younger brothers Li Yuanba 李元霸 who would die in 614 and Li Yuanji and at least one daughter the later Princess Pingyang Li Yuan named Li Shimin Shimin as a shortened form of the phrase save the earth and pacify the people 濟世安民 jishi anmin Li Shimin apparently showed talent early in his life and in 613 the official Gao Shilian impressed with him gave him a niece the later Empress Zhangsun in marriage as his wife he was 14 and she was 12 In 615 when Emperor Wen s son and successor Emperor Yang was ambushed by Eastern Turkic Dongtujue forces under Shibi Khan at Yanmen Commandery present day Daixian in Shanxi 15 a general call was made for men to join the army to help rescue the emperor Li Shimin answered that call and served under the general Yun Dingxing 雲定興 apparently doing so with distinction In 616 when Li Yuan was put in charge of the important city of Taiyuan he brought Li Shimin with him to Taiyuan while leaving at least three other sons Li Jiancheng Li Yuanji and Li Zhiyun 李智雲 by Li Yuan s concubine Lady Wan at the ancestral home Hedong 河東 in modern Yuncheng Shanxi Participation in the rebellion against Sui rule Edit A portrait of Emperor Yang of Sui by the Tang court artist Yan Liben 600 673 Emperor Yang was soon dissatisfied with Li Yuan and Wang Rengong 王仁恭 the governor of Mayi Commandery 馬邑 roughly modern Shuozhou Shanxi over their inability to stop Eastern Turkic incursions and the growing strength of agrarian rebels particularly the Eastern Turkic supported Liu Wuzhou who soon rose against Wang killed him and captured Emperor Yang s secondary palace near Taiyuan Li Yuan also became fearful of a prophecy that the next emperor would be named Li Emperor Yang had previously killed another official Li Hun 李渾 and Li Hun s clan over his fear that Li Hun s nephew Li Min 李敏 would seize the throne Fearful for his life Li Yuan considered rebellion However he did not know that Li Shimin had also been secretly discussing plans for rebellion with Li Yuan s associates Pei Ji and Liu Wenjing Once Li Shimin s plans matured he had Pei inform Li Yuan of them and also had Pei warn Li Yuan that if it were revealed that Li Yuan had had sexual relations with some of Emperor Yang s ladies in waiting at the secondary Jinyang Palace 晉陽宮 which Pei was in charge with and had allowed Li Yuan to do so all of them would be slaughtered Li Yuan agreed to rebel and after secretly summoning Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji from Hedong and his son in law Chai Shao 柴紹 from the capital Chang an he declared a rebellion claiming to want to support Emperor Yang s grandson Yang You the Prince of Dai nominally in charge at Chang an with Emperor Yang at Jiangdu 江都 in modern Yangzhou Jiangsu as emperor He made both Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin major generals and advanced southwest toward Chang an He gave Li Shimin the title of Duke of Dunhuang After defeating local Sui forces loyal to Emperor Yang he defeated a Sui army of 30 000 men under the command of a veteran general of the wars in Korea outside of modern day Beijing However when Li Yuan arrived near Hedong his army was bogged down by the weather With food running out there were rumors that the Eastern Turks and Liu Wuzhou would attack Taiyuan Li Yuan initially ordered retreat but at the earnest opposition by Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin continued to advance After defeating Sui forces at Huoyi 霍邑 also in modern Yuncheng he decided to leave a small contingent to watch over Hedong while advancing across the Yellow River into Guanzhong i e the Chang an region Once he did he headed for Chang an himself while sending Li Jiancheng to capture the territory around the Tong Pass region to prevent Sui forces at Luoyang from reinforcing Chang an and Li Shimin north of the Wei River to capture territory there Meanwhile Li Shimin s sister Chai s wife had also risen in rebellion in support of him and she was able to gather a sizeable army and capture some cities She joined forces with Li Shimin and her husband Chai Shao Soon Li Yuan reconsolidated his forces and put Chang an under siege In winter 617 after defeating a large Sui army he captured Chang an from imperial forces and declared Yang You emperor as Emperor Gong He had himself made regent with the title of grand chancellor and created the Prince of Tang Meanwhile most of the Sui territories and armies did not recognize Emperor Gong as emperor and continued to recognize Emperor Yang as emperor and not as retired emperor He made Li Shimin the Duke of Qin Li Yuan s control of the Chang an region became almost immediately contested by the rebel ruler Xue Ju the Emperor of Qin who sent his son Xue Rengao toward Chang an Li Yuan sent Li Shimin to resist Xue Rengao and Li Shimin defeated Xue Rengao at Fufeng in modern Baoji Shaanxi temporarily causing Xue Ju to toy with the idea of surrendering to Li Yuan although Xue was subsequently dissuaded by his strategist Hao Yuan 郝瑗 from doing so In spring 618 with Sui s eastern capital Luoyang where the officials in charge did not recognize Li Yuan s authorities under attack by the rebel ruler Li Mi the Duke of Wei Li Yuan sent Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin to Luoyang ostensibly to aid the Sui forces at Luoyang but instead intending to test whether Luoyang might submit to him The officials at Luoyang rebuffed his attempt at rapprochement and Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin not wanting to fight either them or Li Mi for control of Luoyang at this stage withdrew Li Yuan subsequently changed Li Shimin s title to Duke of Zhao In summer 618 when news arrived at Chang an that Emperor Yang had been killed at Jiangdu in a coup led by the general Yuwen Huaji Li Yuan had Emperor Gong yield the throne to him establishing Tang Dynasty as its Emperor Gaozu He created Li Jiancheng crown prince but created Li Shimin the Prince of Qin also making him Shangshu Ling 尚書令 the head of the executive bureau of the government 尚書省 Shangshu Sheng and a post considered one for a chancellor while continuing to have Li Shimin serve as a major general as well During Emperor Gaozu s reign Edit Portrait painting of Emperor Gaozu of Tang father of Li Shimin Campaign to reunify the empire Edit The first thing that Li Shimin had to deal with was another incursion by Xue Ju as Xue attacked Jing Prefecture 涇州 roughly modern Pingliang Gansu and Emperor Gaozu sent Li Shimin to resist Xue Li Shimin established his defenses and refused to engage Xue to try to wear Xue Ju out but at that time he was afflicted with malaria and he let his assistants Liu Wenjing and Yin Kaishan 殷開山 take command ordering them not to engage Xue Ju Liu and Yin however did not take Xue Ju seriously and Xue Ju ambushed them at Qianshui Plain 淺水原 in modern Xianyang crushing Tang forces and inflicting 50 60 casualties Li Shimin was forced to withdraw back to Chang an and Liu and Yin were removed from their posts This would be Li Shimin s only defeat recorded in historical records until the Goguryeo campaign of 645 Xue Ju in light of his victory was ready to launch an assault on Chang an itself under Hao Yuan s advice but suddenly died of an illness in fall 618 and was succeeded by Xue Rengao Emperor Gaozu then sent Li Shimin against Xue Rengao Three months after Xue Rengao took the throne Li Shimin engaged him and after a fierce battle between Li Shimin and Xue Rengao s major general Zong Luohou 宗羅睺 Li Shimin crushed Zong s forces and then attacked Xue Rengao Xue Rengao was forced to withdraw into the city of Gaozhi 高墌 in modern Xianyang as well and once he did his soldiers began surrendering to Li Shimin en masse Xue Rengao was himself forced to surrender Li Shimin had him delivered to Chang an where he was executed Around new year 619 Emperor Gaozu made Li Shimin Taiwei 太尉 one of the Three Excellencies and put him in charge of Tang operations east of the Tong Pass citation needed In spring 619 Liu Wuzhou launched a major offensive against Tang He captured Taiyuan in summer 619 forcing Li Yuanji who had been in charge there to flee and then continued his offensive south Emperor Gaozu sent Pei Ji against him but by winter 619 Liu had crushed Pei s forces and taken over nearly all of modern Shanxi Emperor Gaozu shocked at the development considered abandoning the region altogether Li Shimin opposed doing so and offered to lead the army against Liu Emperor Gaozu agreed and commissioned him with an army He crossed the Yellow River and approached Liu s major general Song Jingang 宋金剛 but did not engage him choosing to try to wear Song out only having his subordinates Yin Kaishan and Qin Shubao engage the other Dingyang generals Yuchi Jingde and Xun Xiang 尋相 in relatively low level engagements Eventually in spring 620 when Liu and Song ran out of food supplies they retreated and Li Shimin gave chase dealing Song a major defeat Yuchi and Xun surrendered and after Li Shimin chased further both Liu and Song fled to the Eastern Turks All of Dingyang territory fell into Tang hands In summer 620 Emperor Gaozu again commissioned Li Shimin against a major enemy the former Sui general Wang Shichong who had Sui s last emperor Emperor Yang s grandson Yang Tong yield the throne to him in 619 establishing a new state of Zheng as its emperor When Li Shimin arrived at the Zheng capital Luoyang Wang offered peace but Li Shimin rebuffed him and put Luoyang under siege Meanwhile his subordinates took Zheng cities one by one By winter 620 most of Zheng territory other than Luoyang and Xiangyang defended by Wang Shichong s nephew Wang Honglie 王弘烈 had submitted to Tang Wang sought aid Dou Jiande the Prince of Xia who controlled most of modern Hebei Dou reasoning that if Tang were able to destroy Zheng his own Xia state would be next agreed He sent his official Li Dashi to try to persuade Li Shimin to withdraw but Li Shimin detained Li Dashi and gave no response Meanwhile during the campaign Li Shimin chose some 1 000 elite soldiers 玄甲軍 clad in black uniform and black armor commanded by himself to serve as advance troops with Qin Shubao Yuchi Jingde Cheng Zhijie 程知節 and Zhai Zhangsun 翟長孫 as his assistants Main article Battle of Hulao By spring 621 Luoyang was in desperate situation and Xia forces had not yet arrived but Tang troops had also suffered serious casualties as Luoyang s defenses aided by powerful bows and catapults were holding Emperor Gaozu hearing that Dou had decided to come to Wang s aid ordered Li Shimin to withdraw but Li Shimin sent his secretary Feng Deyi to Chang an to explain to Emperor Gaozu that if he did withdraw Wang would recover and again be a major threat in the future Emperor Gaozu agreed and allowed Li Shimin to continue to siege Luoyang When Xia forward troops arrived first Li Shimin surprised and defeated them and then sent Dou a letter suggesting that he withdraw Dou would not do so and against the advice of his wife Empress Cao and secretary general Ling Jing 凌敬 that he should instead attack Tang s prefectures in modern southern Shanxi he marched toward Luoyang Anticipating Dou s maneuver Li Shimin left a small detachment commanded by Li Yuanji at Luoyang while marching east himself taking up position at the strategic Hulao Pass When the armies engaged at Hulao Li Shimin defeated Dou and captured him He took Dou back to Luoyang and displayed him to Wang Shichong Wang in fear considered abandoning Luoyang and fleeing south to Xiangyang but as his generals pointed out that his only hope was Dou he surrendered Xia forces after initially fleeing back to their capital Mingzhou now Guangfu Hebei also surrendered Zheng and Xia territory were Tang s Li Shimin returned to Chang an in a grand victory procession and to reward Li Shimin Emperor Gaozu awarded both him and Li Yuanji three mints so that they could mint money of their own He also bestowed on Li Shimin the special title of Grand General of Heavenly Strategies 天策上將 tiance shangjiang Meanwhile Li Shimin s staff already full of generals and strategists were supplemented with a number of literary men The former Xia territory did not remain in Tang hands for long In the winter of 621 the Xia general Liu Heita rose against Tang rule claiming to be avenging Dou whom Emperor Gaozu had executed against Li Shimin s wishes after he had been brought back to Chang an Liu was allied with Xu Yuanlang a former agrarian rebel general who was nominally under Wang Shichong and who had submitted to Tang after Wang s defeat Liu dealt successive defeats to Emperor Gaozu s cousin Li Shentong 李神通 the Prince of Huai an Li Xiaochang 李孝常 the Prince of Yi an and Li Shiji By the end he had recovered almost all of the former Xia territory established his capital at Mingzhou and proclaimed himself the Prince of Handong Emperor Gaozu finally sent Li Shimin and Li Yuanji against him in 622 and after some indecisive battles Li Shimin defeated him by first erecting a dam across the Ming River and then destroying it with the resultant flood destroying the rebel army Liu fled to the Eastern Turks while Li Shimin then headed east and defeated Xu After leaving Li Shiji Li Shentong and Ren Gui 任瓌 to continue attacking Xu Li Shimin returned to Chang an Struggle against Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji Edit Armoured horseman Tang dynasty Tomb soldier figurine Tang dynasty Main article Xuanwu Gate Incident By this point Li Shimin and his older brother Li Jiancheng who was created crown prince in 618 reportedly after Emperor Gaozu first offered the position to Li Shimin due to his contributions were locked in an intense rivalry as Li Shimin s accomplishments caused people to speculate that he would displace Li Jiancheng as crown prince and Li Jiancheng while an accomplished general himself was overshadowed by his younger brother The court became divided into a faction favoring the Crown Prince and a faction favoring the Prince of Qin The rivalry was particularly causing problems within the capital as the commands of the Crown Prince the Prince of Qin and the Prince of Qi i e Li Yuanji were said to have the same force as the emperor s edicts and the officials had to carry conflicting orders out by acting on the ones that arrived first Li Shimin s staff was full of talented men but Li Jiancheng was supported by Li Yuanji as well as Emperor Gaozu s concubines who had better relationships with Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji than they did with Li Shimin Late in 622 when Liu Heita returned east after receiving aid from the Eastern Turks defeating and killing Li Shimin s cousin Li Daoxuan 李道玄 the Prince of Huaiyang he again regained most of former Xia territory Li Jiancheng s staff members Wang Gui and Wei Zheng suggested that Li Jiancheng needed to enhance his own reputation in battle and so Li Jiancheng volunteered for the mission Emperor Gaozu thus sent Li Jiancheng assisted by Li Yuanji to attack Liu Li Jiancheng defeated Liu around the new year of 623 and Liu was subsequently betrayed by his own official Zhuge Dewei 諸葛德威 and delivered to Li Jiancheng Li Jiancheng executed Liu in his former capital and returned to Chang an in triumph China was by this point roughly united under Tang rule For the next few years the rivalry intensified although during the meantime both Li Jiancheng and Li Shimin served as generals when the Eastern Gokturks made incursions In 623 when the general Fu Gongshi rebelled at Danyang 丹楊 in modern Nanjing Jiangsu Emperor Gaozu briefly commissioned Li Shimin to attack Fu but soon cancelled the order and sent Li Shimin s cousin Li Xiaogong the Prince of Zhao Commandery instead In 624 when Li Jiancheng was found to have against regulations tried to add soldiers to his guard corps Emperor Gaozu was so angry that he put Li Jiancheng under arrest In fear Li Jiancheng s guard commander Yang Wen gan 楊文幹 rebelled Emperor Gaozu sent Li Shimin against Yang offering to make him crown prince after he returned After Li Shimin left however Feng Deyi now a chancellor Li Yuanji and the concubines all spoke on Li Jiancheng s behalf and after Li Shimin returned Emperor Gaozu did not depose Li Jiancheng but instead blamed the discord between him and Li Shimin on Li Jiancheng s staff members Wang Gui and Wei Ting 韋挺 and Li Shimin s staff member Du Yan exiling them to Xi Prefecture 巂州 roughly modern Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture Sichuan Later that year Emperor Gaozu troubled by repeated Gokturk incursions seriously considered burning Chang an to the ground and moving the capital to Fancheng a suggestion that Li Jiancheng Li Yuanji and Pei Ji agreed with Li Shimin opposed however and the plan was not carried out Meanwhile Li Shimin himself was sending his confidants to Luoyang to build up personal control of the army there After an incident in which Li Shimin suffered a severe case of food poisoning after feasting at Li Jiancheng s palace an event that both Emperor Gaozu and Li Shimin apparently interpreted as an assassination attempt Emperor Gaozu considered sending Li Shimin to guard Luoyang to prevent further conflict but Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji after consulting each other believed that this would only give Li Shimin an opportunity to build up his personal power there and therefore opposed it Emperor Gaozu therefore did not carry out the plan Meanwhile the rivalry continued Traditional historical accounts also indicated that at one point when Li Shimin visited Li Yuanji s mansion Li Yuanji wanted to assassinate Li Shimin but Li Jiancheng who could not resolve to kill a brother stopped the plot There was yet another incident in which Li Jiancheng knowing that a horse threw its rider easily had Li Shimin ride it causing Li Shimin to fall off from it several times By 626 Li Shimin was fearful that he would be killed by Li Jiancheng and his staff members Fang Xuanling Du Ruhui and Zhangsun Wuji were repeatedly encouraging Li Shimin to attack Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji first while Wei Zheng was encouraging Li Jiancheng to attack Li Shimin first Li Jiancheng persuaded Emperor Gaozu to remove Fang and Du as well as Li Shimin s trusted guard generals Yuchi Jingde and Cheng Zhijie from Li Shimin s staff Zhangsun Wuji who remained on Li Shimin s staff continued to try to persuade Li Shimin to attack first In summer 626 the Gokturks were making another attack and under Li Jiancheng s suggestion Emperor Gaozu instead of sending Li Shimin to resist the Gokturks as he first was inclined decided to send Li Yuanji instead Li Yuanji was given command of much of the army previously under Li Shimin s control further troubling Li Shimin who believed that with the army in Li Yuanji s hands he would be unable to resist an attack Li Shimin had Yuchi summon Fang and Du back to his mansion secretly and then on one night submitted an accusation to Emperor Gaozu that Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji were committing adultery with Emperor Gaozu s concubines Emperor Gaozu in response issued summonses to Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji for the next morning convening the senior officials Pei Ji Xiao Yu and Chen Shuda to examine Li Shimin s accusations As Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji approached the central gate leading to Emperor Gaozu s palace Xuanwu Gate 玄武門 Li Shimin carried out the ambush he had set He personally fired an arrow that killed Li Jiancheng Subsequently Yuchi Jingde killed Li Yuanji Li Shimin s forces entered the palace and under the intimidation of Li Shimin s forces Emperor Gaozu agreed to create Li Shimin crown prince Li Jiancheng s and Li Yuanji s sons were killed and Li Shimin took Li Yuanji s wife Princess Yang as a concubine Two months later with Li Shimin firmly in control of power Emperor Gaozu yielded the throne to him as Emperor Taizong As emperor EditEarly reign 626 633 Edit Left Hanging Portrait of Emperor Taizong kept in the National Palace Museum Right A mural painting of Emperor Taizong located bottom center dated to AD 642 located in Cave 220 Dunhuang Gansu province One of the first actions that Emperor Taizong carried out as emperor was releasing a number of ladies in waiting from the palace and returning them to their homes so that they could be married He made his wife Princess Zhangsun the empress and their oldest son Li Chengqian the crown prince Emperor Taizong also immediately faced a crisis as the Eastern Turkic leader Jiali Khan Ashina Duobi along with his nephew the subordinate Tuli Khan Ashina Shibobi 阿史那什鉢苾 launched a major incursion toward Chang an and just 19 days after Emperor Taizong took the throne the two khans were just across the Wei River from Chang an Emperor Taizong accompanied by Gao Shilian and Fang Xuanling was forced to meet Ashina Duobi across the river and personally negotiate peace terms including tributes to Eastern Turks before Ashina Duobi withdrew Late in 626 Emperor Taizong ranked the contributors to Tang rule and granted them titles and fiefs naming among the first rank of contributors Zhangsun Wuji Fang Xuanling Du Ruhui Yuchi Jingde and Hou Junji When Li Shentong as his distant uncle objected to being ranked under Fang and Du Emperor Taizong personally explained how Fang and Du s strategies allowed him to be successful and this managed to get the other objectors to quiet down as Emperor Taizong was even willing to rank low such an honored individual as Li Shentong Emperor Taizong also buried Li Jiancheng and Li Yuanji with honors due imperial princes and had their staff members attend the funeral processions Meanwhile he appeared to begin to reshuffle government further which he had already begun after being created crown prince by dismissing his father s trusted advisors Xiao Yu and Chen Shuda making his own trusted advisors chancellors Xiao however was soon restored to being chancellor although his career during Emperor Taizong s reign would see repeated dismissals and repeated restorations However he also began to greatly pay attention to the officials submissions and their criticism of imperial governance making changes where he saw needed He also particularly began to trust Wei Zheng accepting much advice from Wei as far as his personal conduct was concerned He was also willing to demote his own trusted advisors as he demoted Gao Shilian after finding that Gao had held back submissions from his deputy Wang Gui Viewing Sui s Emperor Yang as a negative example he frequently solicited criticism rewarding those officials willing to offer them particularly Wei and Wang Gui His openness to opposing ideas was also evident in his attempt to reconcile traditional Taoist religion and Buddhism as demonstrated in his Emperor s Preface to the Sacred Teachings 大唐三藏聖教序 16 and Emperor Taizong was at least a nominal Taoist 17 Li Yi s Rebellion Edit Also in 627 the general Li Yi the Prince of Yan a late Sui warlord who later submitted to Tang who associated with Li Jiancheng fearing that Emperor Taizong would eventually take action against him rebelled at Bin Prefecture 豳州 in modern Xianyang but was quickly crushed by the official Yang Ji 楊岌 and killed in flight Later that year when Emperor Gaozu s cousin Li Youliang 李幼良 the Prince of Changle the commandant at Liang Prefecture 涼州 roughly modern Wuwei Gansu was accused of allowing his staff to oppress the people and to trade with Qiang and Xiongnu tribesmen Emperor Taizong sent the chancellor Yuwen Shiji Yuwen Huaji s brother to investigate and in fear Li Youliang s staff members plotted to hold him hostage and rebel When this was discovered Emperor Taizong forced Li Youliang to commit suicide Late in the year Wang Junkuo 王君廓 the commandant at You Prefecture 幽州 roughly modern Beijing also rebelled but was defeated quickly and killed in flight However although there were also reports that Feng Ang 馮盎 a warlord in the Lingnan region was rebelling Emperor Taizong at Wei s suggestion sent messengers to comfort Feng and Feng submitted Also in 627 Emperor Taizong seeing that there were too many prefectures and counties consolidated and merged many of them and further created another level of local political organization above prefectures the circuit 道 dao dividing his state into 10 circuits Campaign against the Eastern Turks Edit Main article Tang campaign against the Eastern Turks Emperor Taizong depicted giving an audience to Gar Tongtsen Yulsung the ambassador of the Tibetan Empire in a later copy of a painting by court artist Yan Liben 600 673 AD In 628 with Ashina Duobi and Ashina Shibobi having a falling out Ashina Shibobi submitted to Emperor Taizong as did the chieftains of Khitan tribes who had previously submitted to the Eastern Turks With their khaganate in turmoil Ashina Duobi was no longer able to protect the last late Sui rebel ruler who alone remained standing against Tang pressure Liang Shidu the Emperor of Liang and in summer 628 with the Tang generals Chai Shao and Xue Wanjun 薛萬均 sieging the Liang capital Shuofang in modern Yulin Shaanxi Liang Shidu s cousin Liang Luoren 梁洛仁 killed Liang Shidu and surrendered finally uniting China With the Eastern Turkic Khaganate weakened their vassal Xueyantuo also broke away and formed its own khanate and Emperor Taizong entered into an alliance with Xueyantuo s leader Yinan creating Yinan the Zhenzhupiqie Khan or Zhenzhu Khan in short In late 629 believing the time ripe for a major attack on the Eastern Turks Emperor Taizong commissioned the general Li Jing with overall command of a multi pronged army assisted by the generals Li Shiji Li Daozong Chai Shao Xue Wanche 薛萬徹 Xue Wanjun s brother and Su Dingfang attacking the Eastern Turks at multiple points The army was successful in its attacks forcing Ashina Duobi to flee and by late spring 630 Ashina Duobi had been captured and Eastern Turkic chieftains all submitted to Tang Emperor Taizong spared Ashina Duobi but detained him at Chang an and he considered what to do with the Eastern Turks The main opposing views were from the chancellors Wen Yanbo who advocated leaving the Turks within China s borders to serve as a defense perimeter and Wei who advocated leaving them outside the borders Emperor Taizong accepted Wen s suggestion and established a number of prefectures to accommodate the Turks leaving them governed by their chieftains without creating a new khan to govern them In 631 Emperor Taizong established a feudal scheme where the contributors to his reign were given in addition to their current posts additional posts as prefectural governors to be passed on to their descendants Soon however receiving much opposition to the plan the strongest of which came from Zhangsun Wuji Emperor Taizong cancelled the scheme After the conquest of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate Emperor Taizong s officials repeatedly requested that he carry out sacrifices to heaven and earth at Mount Tai and Emperor Taizong while at times tempted by the proposal was repeatedly dissuaded from doing so by Wei who pointed out the expenses and the labors that would be imposed on the people as a result and also that this would open China s borders to attack Middle reign 634 641 Edit Detail of Yan Liben s painting on the reception of the Tibetan envoy showing Tang Taizong In 634 Emperor Taizong sent 13 high level officials including Li Jing and Xiao Yu to examine the circuits to see whether the local officials were capable to find out whether the people were suffering to comfort the poor and to select capable people to serve in civil service Li Jing initially recommended Wei Zheng but Emperor Taizong declined sending Wei stating that Wei needed to stay to point out his faults and that he could not afford to have Wei away even for a single day citation needed Campaign against Tuyuhun Edit Main article Emperor Taizong s campaign against Tuyuhun Around this time Tang was having increasing conflicts with Tuyuhun whose Busabo Khan Murong Fuyun under instigation by his strategist the Prince of Tianzhu had been repeatedly attacking Tang prefectures on the borders At one point Murong Fuyun sought to have a Tang princess marry his son the Prince of Zun but the marriage negotiations broke down over Emperor Taizong s insistence that the Prince of Zun come to Chang an for the wedding In summer 634 Emperor Taizong had the generals Duan Zhixuan and Fan Xing 樊興 lead forces against Tuyuhun but with Tuyuhun s forces highly mobile and avoiding direct confrontation Duan while not defeated could not make major gains Once Duan withdrew Tuyuhun resumed hostilities In winter 634 with the Tibetan king Songtsan Gampo making overtures to marry a Tang princess as well Emperor Taizong sent the emissary Feng Dexia 馮德遐 to Tibet with an eye toward an alliance against Tuyuhun In winter 634 he commissioned Li Jing assisted by the other generals Hou Junji Xue Wanjun Xue Wanche Qibi Heli Li Daozong Li Daliang Li Daoyan 李道彥 and Gao Zengsheng 高甑生 to attack Tuyuhun In 635 Li Jing s forces crushed Tuyuhun forces Murong Fuyun was killed by his own subordinates and his son Murong Shun killed the Prince of Tianzhu and surrendered Emperor Taizong created Murong Shun the new khan although Murong Shun was soon assassinated Emperor Taizong then created Murong Shun s son Murong Nuohebo as the new khan Also in 635 Emperor Gaozu died and Emperor Taizong observing a mourning period briefly had Li Chengqian serve as regent and after he resumed his authorities less than two months later he still authorized Li Chengqian to thereafter rule on minor matters In spring 636 Emperor Taizong commissioned his brothers and sons as commandants and changed their titles in accordance with the commands that they received sending them to their posts with the exception of his son Li Tai the Prince of Wei who by this point was beginning to be highly favored by him He further allowed Li Tai to engage literary men to serve as his assistants as Li Tai favored literature From this point on Li Tai would be so favored that there began to be talks that Emperor Taizong might let him displace Li Chengqian whose favors began to wane In fall 636 Empress Zhangsun died Emperor Taizong mourned her bitterly and personally wrote the text of her monument In summer 637 Emperor Taizong recreated the feudal scheme that he had considered and abandoned in 631 creating 35 hereditary prefect posts By 639 however the system was again abandoned after much opposition Treatment of Noble Clan Edit Fountain Memory calligraphy of Emperor Taizong on a Tang stele Sometime before 638 Emperor Taizong disgusted with the traditional noble clans of Cui Lu Li and Zheng and believing that they were abusing their highly honored names commissioned Gao Shilian Wei Ting Linghu Defen and Cen Wenben to compile a work later to be known as the Records of Clans 氏族志 with the intent of dividing the clans into nine classes based on their past contributions good deeds and ill deeds In an initial draft that Gao submitted he nevertheless ranked the branch of the Cui clan that the official Cui Min gan 崔民幹 belonged to as the highest a decision that Emperor Taizong rebuked as he pointed out that Gao was merely again looking at tradition and not the recent contributions He therefore personally intervened in revising the work reducing Cui s clan to the third class Tibetan attack on Songzhou Edit Main article Tibetan attack on Songzhou In fall 638 Tibet s Songtsan Gampo displeased that Emperor Taizong had declined to give him a Tang princess in marriage and believing that Murong Nuohebo had persuaded Emperor Taizong to decline the marriage proposal launched a major attack with forces of 200 000 on Tuyuhun and then on several Tang prefectures putting Song Prefecture 松州 roughly modern Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture Sichuan under siege Emperor Taizong commissioned Hou Junji assisted by Zhishi Sili 執失思力 Niu Jinda 牛進達 and Liu Jian 劉簡 of a total of force of 50 000 to counterattack and Niu who commanded the forward forces defeated Tibetan forces at Song Prefecture Songsan Gampo withdrew and sued for peace but still sought to marry a Tang princess Emperor Taizong agreed this time Also in 638 believing that Xueyantuo was growing increasingly strong and difficult to control Emperor Taizong granted Yinan s sons Bazhuo and Jialibi 頡利苾 both lesser khan titles to try to create dissensions between them In summer 639 Ashina Jiesheshuai 阿史那結社率 the younger brother of Ashina Shibobi whom Emperor Taizong did not favor and gave little recognition to formed a conspiracy with Ashina Shibobi s son Ashina Hexiangu 阿史那賀暹鶻 to assassinate Emperor Taizong They had planned to wait for Li Zhi the Prince of Jin to depart from the palace in the morning and use that opportunity to attack the palace On the day they planned however Li Zhi did not leave the palace and Ashina Jiesheshuai attacked anyway but was quickly defeated captured and executed After this incident however the officials began advocating sending the Turks away from the heart of the state In fall 639 Emperor Taizong created a Turkish prince who had served him faithfully Li Simo ne Ashina Simo as the khan of a newly recreated Eastern Turkic state as Qilibi Khan giving him all of the Turks and Xiongnu who had surrendered as his subordinates to be settled north of the Great Wall and the Yellow River However the Turks were fearful of Xueyantuo and initially refused to head to their new location Emperor Taizong issued an edict to Yinan that he and Li Simo keep their peace and not attack each other and after receiving from Yinan the assurance that he would not attack the Turks advanced to the new location Campaign against Western Turks Edit Main article Tang campaigns against the Western Turks Further information Turks in the Tang military Taizong began a series of campaigns against the Western Turks Xitujue and their allies the oasis states of the Tarim Basin around 640 18 These hostilities between the Western Turks and Tang would continue until the defeat and conquest of the Western Turks in 657 under Taizong s successor Gaozong 19 The kingdoms of Shule and Khotan surrendered to the Chinese in 632 as did the kingdom of Yarkand in 635 10 Qu Wentai 麴文泰 the king of Gaochang who had previously been submissive to Tang had become increasingly hostile to Tang allying with the Western Turks In 640 Emperor Taizong commissioned Hou Junji assisted by Xue Wanjun to launch a major attack on Gaochang As they approached Gaochang Qu Wentai died in fear and was succeeded by his son Qu Zhisheng 麴智盛 Qu Zhisheng offered to submit but Hou demanded a surrender which Qu Zhisheng refused However Hou put Gaochang under siege and with aid from the Western Turks not arriving Qu Zhisheng surrendered Wei Zheng suggested that Emperor Taizong allow Qu Zhisheng to remain king pointing out that the monetary and human costs would be high to keep a permanent garrison at Gaochang but Emperor Taizong disagreed and he converted Gaochang into two prefectures and annexed it into his state In winter 640 Songsan Gampo sent his prime minister Gar Tongtsen Yulsung Lu Dongzan 祿東贊 in Chinese as an emissary to Tang offering tributes and again requesting marriage Emperor Taizong created a daughter of a clansman as the Princess Wencheng and in 641 sent Li Daozong to accompany Princess Wencheng to Tibet to preside over the wedding In winter 641 believing that Emperor Taizong was about to carry out sacrifices to heaven and earth at Mount Tai and would be unable to aid the Eastern Turks Yinan launched a major attack on them commanded by his son Dadu 大度 Li Simo was forced to retreat inside the Great Wall Emperor Taizong commissioned Li Shiji assisted by Zhang Jian 張儉 Li Daliang Zhang Shigui 張士貴 and Li Xiyu 李襲譽 to attack Xueyantuo Li Shiji soon defeated Dadu at Nuozhen River 諾真水 flowing through modern Baotou Inner Mongolia and Dadu fled Late reign 642 649 Edit Emperor Taizong s campaign against the oasis states See also Emperor Taizong s campaign against Goguryeo campaign against Xueyantuo campaign against the oasis states Conquest of Kucha and Tang campaigns against Karasahr By 642 it was clear that Li Tai had ambitions on replacing his brother Li Chengqian and the governmental officials began to be divided into pro Li Chengqian and pro Li Tai factions After urging by Wei Zheng and Chu Suiliang to take actions that would clarify that Li Chengqian s position was secure Emperor Taizong attempted to do so by making repeated statements to that effect but his continued favoring of Li Tai led to continued speculation among officials Also by 642 Xueyantuo had posed a sufficiently serious threat albeit still formally submissive that Emperor Taizong saw two alternatives destroying it by force or forming into a heqin relationship by marrying one of his daughters to Yinan This particularly became an issue after the Tang general Qibi Heli 契苾何力 the chieftain of the Qibi Tribe was kidnapped by his own subordinates and taken to Xueyantuo In order to ransom Qibi Emperor Taizong made a promise to eventually give his daughter Princess Xinxing to Yinan in marriage and Yinan released Qibi In the winter 642 an event took place in Goguryeo that would eventually precipitate wars between Tang and Goguryeo According to Chinese accounts 20 King Yeongnyu the king of Goguryeo was apprehensive about his general Yeon Gaesomun and was plotting with his other officials to kill Yeon When Yeon received the news he started a coup and killed the king and the high level officials He declared King Yeongnyu s nephew Go Jang King Bojang king while taking power himself with the title of Dae Mangniji Korean 대막리지 Hanja 大莫離支 Generalissimo When Emperor Taizong received the news there were suggestions that an attack be launched against Goguryeo suggestions that Emperor Taizong initially declined In spring 643 Wei died and Emperor Taizong mourned him bitterly authoring Wei s monument himself and prior to Wei s death promising to give his daughter Princess Hengshan in marriage to Wei s son Wei Shuyu 魏叔玉 Later in spring Emperor Taizong commissioned 24 portraits at Lingyan Pavilion to commemorate the 24 great contributors to his reign Contacts with the Byzantine Empire Edit Further information Sino Roman relations and Europeans in Medieval China Fanciful modern representation of the Byzantine embassy to Tang Taizong in 643 CE According to the Xi an Stele Emperor Taizong recognized the Nestorian Church of the East due to efforts of the Christian missionary Alopen in 635 CE 21 The Old Book of Tang and New Book of Tang mention several embassies made by Fu lin 拂菻 i e the Byzantine Empire which they equated with Daqin which may refer to the Roman Empire or Middle East beginning in 643 with an embassy sent by the king Boduoli 波多力 i e Constans II Pogonatos to Emperor Taizong 22 bearing gifts such as red glass and green gemstones 23 These histories also provided cursory descriptions of Constantinople and its walls 24 as well as how it was besieged by Da shi 大食 the Arabs of the Umayyad Caliphate and their commander Mo yi 摩拽 i e Muawiyah I governor of Syria before becoming caliph who forced the Byzantines to pay tribute 23 25 Henry Yule highlights the fact that Yazdegerd III r 632 651 last ruler of the Sasanian Empire sent diplomats to China for securing aid from Emperor Taizong considered the suzerain over Ferghana in Central Asia during the loss of the Persian heartland to the Islamic Rashidun Caliphate which may have also prompted the Byzantines to send envoys to China amid their recent loss of Syria to the Muslims 26 Tang Chinese sources also recorded how Sassanid prince Peroz III 636 679 fled to Tang China following the conquest of Persia by the growing Islamic caliphate 27 The expansion of China s power into Central Asia under Emperor Taizong seems to have been noticed in the West Theophylact Simocatta a Byzantine Greek historian during the reign of Heraclius r 610 641 wrote that Taugast or Taugas Old Turkic Tabghach from Tuoba the Xianbei clan of Northern Wei 28 was a great eastern empire in the Far East that ruled over Turkic people with a capital city roughly 1 500 miles northeast from India that he called Khubdan from the Turkic word Khumdan meaning Chang an where idolatry was practiced but the people were wise and lived by just laws 29 He depicted the Chinese empire as being divided by a great river i e the Yangzi that served as the boundary between two rival states at war yet during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Maurice 582 602 AD the northerners wearing black coats conquered the red coats of the south black being a distinctive color worn by the people of Shaanxi location of the Sui capital Sui Chang an according to the 16th century Persian traveler Hajji Mahomed or Chaggi Memet 30 This account may correspond to the conquest of the Chen dynasty and reunification of China by Emperor Wen of Sui r 581 604 30 Simocatta names their ruler as Taisson which he claimed meant Son of God either correlating to the Chinese Tianzi i e Son of Heaven or even the name of the contemporary ruler Emperor Taizong 31 Succession dispute Edit Also in 643 Emperor Taizong would see major turmoil among his own closest family In spring 643 his son Li You 李祐 the Prince of Qi angry over restrictions that his secretary general Quan Wanji 權萬紀 had often placed on him killed Quan and declared a rebellion Emperor Taizong sent Li Shiji against Li You but before Li Shiji could engage Li You Li You was captured by his own subordinate Du Xingmin 杜行敏 and delivered to Chang an where Emperor Taizong ordered him to commit suicide and executed 44 of his associates The death of Li You drew out news of another plot Li Chengqian who had been fearful that Emperor Taizong would eventually remove him and replace him with Li Tai had begun to conspire with Hou Junji Li Yuanchang 李元昌 the Prince of Han Emperor Taizong s brother the general Li Anyan 李安儼 and his brothers in law Zhao Jie 趙節 and Du He 杜荷 Du Ruhui s son to overthrow Emperor Taizong During the investigations in the aftermaths of Li You s rebellion one of the co conspirators Li Chengqian s guard Gegan Chengji 紇干承基 was implicated by association and in order to save himself he revealed Li Chengqian s plot Emperor Taizong was shocked by the news and he appointed Zhangsun Wuji Fang Xuanling Xiao Yu and Li Shiji along with the officials in charge of the supreme court and the legislative and examination bureaus of the government to carry out a joint investigation At the suggestion of the mid level official Lai Ji Emperor Taizong deposed but did not kill Li Chengqian while ordering Li Yuanchang to commit suicide and executing Hou Junji Li Anyan Zhao and Du Taizong s eldest son Li Chengqian chose to speak Turkic dress in Turkic clothes and even set up a tent in his residence in imitation of a Turkic khan Taizong removed him from the position of heir apparent and chose as his successor Li Zhi who embraced Han Chinese cultural heritage 32 After Li Chengqian was deposed Emperor Taizong briefly promised Li Tai that he would be made crown prince However as the investigations continued Emperor Taizong came to the belief that Li Chengqian s downfall was driven by Li Tai s machinations and therefore resolved to depose Li Tai as well At Zhangsun s suggestion Emperor Taizong created a younger son Li Zhi the Prince of Jin who like Li Chengqian and Li Tai were born of Empress Zhangsun crown prince who was considered kinder and gentler while exiling Li Chengqian and Li Tai However starting later that year Emperor Taizong began to doubt whether Li Zhi s personality was sufficiently strong to serve as emperor and he toyed with the idea of making another son Li Ke the Prince of Wu a son of his concubine Consort Yang Emperor Yang of Sui s daughter crown prince but did not do so due to strong opposition by Zhangsun Wuji Meanwhile coming to the belief that he made an ill advised promise to Yinan to give him Princess Xinxing in marriage Emperor Taizong demanded a large amount of bride price 50 000 horses 10 000 cows and camels and 100 000 sheep a price that Yinan agreed to but could not immediately collect and deliver Emperor Taizong used it as an excuse to cancel the marriage agreement Meanwhile as Wei Zheng had prior to his death recommended Hou Junji and Li Chengqian s staff member Du Zhenglun as chancellors Emperor Taizong came to suspect that Wei was part of the plot as well He destroyed the monument he had authored for Wei and cancelled the betrothal between Wei Shuyu and Princess Hengshan Campaign against the Karasahr Edit Main article Tang campaigns against Karasahr In 644 with Yanqi s king Long Tuqizhi 龍突騎支 who had assisted the Tang campaign to conquer Gaochang turning against Tang and allying with the Western Turks Emperor Taizong sent the general Guo Xiaoke 郭孝恪 the commandant at Anxi 安西 i e Gaochang to launch a surprise attack on Yanqi Guo caught Long Tuqizhi by surprise and captured him making his brother Long Lipozhun 龍栗婆準 regent The Western Turkic viceroy Ashina Quli 阿史那屈利 subsequently captured Long Lipozhun and briefly occupied Yanqi although he then not wanting a direct confrontation with Tang withdrew and the Yanqi nobles made Long Tuqizhi s cousin Long Xuepoanazhi 龍薛婆阿那支 king Goguryeo Tang War Edit Main article Goguryeo Tang War The Sui dynasty tried to invade Goguryeo in 598 612 613 amp 614 Taizong campaign map was in 645 Gaozong s campaigns were in 661 667 amp 668 Also in 644 with Goguryeo attacking Silla and Silla requesting aid Emperor Taizong decided to prepare for a campaign to conquer Goguryeo He arrested the emissaries that Yeon sent to the Tang court accusing them of disloyalty to King Yeongnyu By winter 644 the mobilization was in full force Apparently because of Tang s preparation to attack Goguryeo however the reconstituted Eastern Turkic people fearing an attack from Xueyantuo at a time that Tang would be ill equipped to assist panicked and abandoned their khan Li Simo fleeing into Tang territory Emperor Taizong reabsorbed the Eastern Turks into Tang while making Li Simo a general in his army In spring 645 Emperor Taizong departed from Luoyang and led the troops northeast behind a vanguard of 60 000 commanded by Li Shiji and Li Daozong At the same time Zhang Liang led the other 40 000 from sea By summer 645 Tang forces had captured Yodong Fortress 遼東 in modern Liaoyang Liaoning and headed southeast toward the Goguryeo capital Pyongyang Emperor Taizong personally led about 30 000 Tang and tribal forces and defeated a 150 000 force commanded by two Gogureyo generals and then put Ansi 安市 in modern Anshan Liaoning fortress under siege 33 However the capable defense put up by Ansi s commanding general stymied Tang forces and in late fall after suffering some casualties with winter fast approaching and his food supplies running out Emperor Taizong withdrew He much regretted launching the campaign and made the comment If Wei Zheng were still alive he would never have let me launch this campaign He reerected the monument he authored for Wei and summoned Wei s wife and children to meet him treating them well Campaign against Xueyantuo and conquest of the Kucha Edit Main articles Emperor Taizong s campaign against Xueyantuo and Conquest of Kucha Meanwhile in the aftermaths of the Goguryeo campaign Xueyantuo s Duomi Khan Bazhuo son of Yinan who had died earlier in 645 launched attacks against Tang s border prefectures with largely inconclusive results In spring 646 the Tang generals Qiao Shiwang 喬師望 and Zhishi Sili counterattacked defeating Bazhuo s forces causing him to flee His vassals Huige Pugu 僕骨 and Tongluo 同羅 tribes took the opportunity to rebel and attack him Hearing this Emperor Taizong launched a major attack commanded by Li Daozong Ashina She er 阿史那社爾 Zhishi Sili Qibi Heli Xue Wanche and Zhang Jian against Xueyantuo With Xueyantuo under attack from multiple sides Bazhuo was killed by Huige forces and the remaining Xueyantuo people fled and supported Bazhuo s cousin Duomozhi as Yitewushi Khan but soon offered to submit to Tang Emperor Taizong sent Li Shiji toward Duomozhi s location with the direction to either accept his submission or destroy him Duomozhi surrendered and was taken to Chang an ending Xueyantuo s rule over the region The other tribes formerly submissive to Xueyantuo offered Emperor Taizong the title of Heavenly Khan and thereafter largely became submissive to Tang d 35 Tang nominally established seven command posts and six prefectures over the region Huige s khan Yaoluoge Tumidu 藥羅葛吐迷度 while submissive to Tang for some time tried to take control over the region himself but was subsequently assassinated in 648 and there would be no other organized attempt by Huige to take over the region until for about another century A bas relief of a soldier and horse with elaborate saddle and stirrups from the tomb of Emperor Taizong c 650 The relief shown here depicts Autumn Dew also known as Whirlwind Victory and is housed at the Penn Museum in Philadelphia PA After the victory over Xueyantuo Emperor Taizong again turned his attention toward to Goguryeo cutting off relations once more and considering another campaign Under suggestions by some of his officials he decided to launch harassment campaigns against Goguryeo s northern region on a yearly basis to weaken Goguryeo gradually The first of these campaigns was launched in spring 647 with Li Shiji and Niu Jinda in command and would reoccur All this was in preparation of another campaign in 649 with forces totaling 300 000 but Taizong died before this campaign and the campaign was stalled into Gaozong s reign In 648 Emperor Taizong launched another campaign commanded by Ashina She er aimed at Qiuzi but first attacking Yanqi and killing Long Xuepoanazhi and replacing him with his cousin Long Xiannazhun 龍先那準 Ashina She er advanced on Qiuzi and captured its king Bai Helibushibi 白訶黎布失畢 making his brother king instead Death EditBy summer of 649 Emperor Taizong was seriously ill with some believing that his illness was caused by the medicine he was administered by Buddhists 36 or his taking of pills given to him by alchemists Believing Li Shiji to be capable but fearing that he would not be submissive to Li Zhi he demoted Li Shiji out of the capital to be the commandant at remote Die Prefecture 疊州 roughly modern Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Gansu with instructions to Li Zhi that if Li Shiji hesitated to execute him immediately and if he did not to recall him after Emperor Taizong s death and make him chancellor Li Shiji when receiving the order and realizing that his life was at stake immediately departed for Die Prefecture After Emperor Taizong s death Li Zhi would indeed recall Li Shiji and make him chancellor Soon thereafter Emperor Taizong after entrusting Li Zhi to Zhangsun Wuji and Chu Suiliang died at his summer palace Cuiwei Palace 翠微宮 His death was initially kept a secret and three days later after his casket had been returned to Chang an his death was announced and Li Zhi took the throne as Emperor Gaozong Monuments EditAfter consolidating the Tang Empire Emperor Taizong ordered six large stone panels known as Zhaoling Liujun 昭陵六駿 to be carved with the portraits of his favorite horses These were the horses he had ridden in overcoming his rivals and securing the borders of the country Since I engaged in military campaigns those war chargers which carried me rushing on the enemy and breaking the line and which rescued me from perils their true images should be portrayed on stone and be placed left and right of my tomb to demonstrate the righteousness of curtain and cover 37 Emperor Taizong further composed laudatory poems for each of the six horses depicted in the stone reliefs Constructed between 636 and 649 CE the stone reliefs exemplify the beauty of early Tang sculpture the images are realistic yet powerful created with simplicity and matured craftsmanship 38 After Taizong s death the monuments were situated along the east and west sides of the spirit path at the North Gate of the tomb complex named Zhaoling or Zhao Mausoleum 39 The six stone horse reliefs remained at the Mausoleum until the early twentieth century when four were removed to the Beilin Museum in Xi an China and two were sold and subsequently donated to the Penn Museum in Philadelphia in 1921 40 Era name EditZhenguan traditional Chinese 貞觀 simplified Chinese 贞观 pinyin zhenguan 627 649Chancellors during reign EditName In office NotesXiao Yu 626 627 630 643 646 Chen Shuda 626 Feng Deyi 626 627 Yuwen Shiji 626 627 Gao Shilian 626 627 638 647 Fang Xuanling 626 643 643 648 Zhangsun Wuji 627 628 645 649 Du Yan 627 628 Du Ruhui 628 629 Li Jing 628 634 Wang Gui 628 633 Wei Zheng 629 642 Wen Yanbo 630 637 Dai Zhou 630 633 Hou Junji 630 632 632 643 Yang Shidao 636 643 645 Liu Ji 639 645 Cen Wenben 642 645 Li Shiji 643 649 Zhang Liang 643 646 Ma Zhou 644 648 Chu Suiliang 644 647 648 649 Xu Jingzong 645 e Gao Jifu 645 e Zhang Xingcheng 645 e Cui Renshi 648 Family EditConsorts and Issue Empress Wende of the Zhangsun clan of Henan 文德皇后 河南長孫氏 601 636 Li Chengqian Prince Min of Hengshan 恆山愍王 李承乾 618 645 first son Li Tai Prince Gong of Pu 濮恭王 李泰 620 653 fourth son Princess Changle 長樂公主 621 643 personal name Lizhi 麗質 fifth daughter Married Zhangsun Chong of Henan 河南 長孫衝 a son of Zhangsun Wuji in 633 and had issue one son Li Zhi Gaozong 高宗 李治 628 683 ninth son Princess Chengyang 城陽公主 630 671 personal name Yuemao 月貌 sixteenth daughter Married Du He of Jingzhao Duke Xiangyang 京兆 杜荷 616 643 a son of Du Ruhui Married Xue Guan of Hedong 河東 薛瓘 in 643 and had issue two sons Princess Jinyang 晉陽公主 633 644 personal name Mingda 明达 Princess Xincheng 新城公主 634 663 personal name Zi 字 twenty first daughter Married Zhangsun Quan of Henan 河南 長孫詮 636 659 in 649 Married Wei Zhengju of Jingzhao 京兆 韋正矩 d 663 in 660 Noble Consort of the Wei clan of Jingzhao 貴妃 京兆韋氏 597 665 personal name Gui 珪 Princess Linchuan 臨川公主 624 682 personal name Mengjiang 孟姜 tenth daughter Married Zhou Daowu of Runan Duke Qiao 汝南 周道務 and had issue three sons two daughters Li Shen Prince of Ji 紀王 李慎 629 689 tenth son Noble Consort of the Yang clan 貴妃 楊氏 Li Fu Prince of Zhao 趙王 李福 634 670 13th son Consort of the Yang clan 妃 楊氏 Li Ke Prince of Wu 吳王 李恪 619 653 third son Li Yin Prince Dao of Shu 蜀悼王 李愔 621 667 sixth son Consort of the Yin clan 妃 陰氏 Li You Prince of Qi 齊王 李佑 621 643 fifth son Virtuous Consort of the Yan clan 德妃 燕氏 609 671 Li Zhen Prince Jing of Yue 越敬王 李貞 627 688 eighth son Li Xiao Prince Shang of Jiang 江殤王 李囂 630 632 11th son Able Consort of the Zheng clan 賢妃 郑氏 Able Consort of the Xu clan 賢妃 徐氏 627 650 personal name Hui 惠 Lady of Bright Countenance of the Wei clan 昭容 韋氏 personal name Nizi 尼子 Imperial Concubine of a certain clan 下嫔某氏 Princess Yuzhang 豫章公主 621 642 sixth daughter Married Tang Yishi 唐義識 a son of Tang Jian in 637 and had issue one son Beauty of the Xiao clan 美人 萧氏 Talented Lady of the Wu clan 624 705 personal name Mei 媚 known commonly as Empress Wu Zetian Talented Lady of the Cui clan of Qinghe 才人 清河崔氏 Talented Lady of the Xiao clan 才人 萧氏 Princess consort of the Yang clan of Hongnong 王妃 弘農楊氏 42 Li Ming Prince Gong of Cao 曹恭王 李明 d 682 14th son Lady of the Wang clan 王氏 Li Yun Prince of Jiang 蔣王 李惲 d 674 seventh son Lady of the Gao clan 高氏 Unknown Li Kuan Prince Chu 楚王 李寬 b 619 second son Li Jian Prince Dai 代王 李簡 631 12th son Princess Xiangcheng 襄城公主 d 651 first daughter Married Xiao Rui of Lanling Duke Song 蘭陵 蕭銳 a son of Xiao Yu Princess Runan 汝南公主 d 636 third daughter Princess Nanping 南平公主 d 650 third daughter Married Wang Jingzhi Baron Nancheng 王敬直 the youngest son of Wang Gui in 637 Married Liu Xuanyi of Henan Duke Yu 河南 劉玄意 in 643 Princess Sui an 遂安公主 d 651 fourth daughter Married Dou Kui of Henan Baron Xindou 河南 竇逵 Married Wang Dali 王大禮 613 669 and had issue one son Princess Baling 巴陵公主 d 653 seventh daughter Married Chai Lingwu Duke Xiangyang 柴令武 d 653 the second son of Chai Shao Princess Pu an 普安公主 eighth daughter Married Shi Renbiao Duke Dou 史仁表 Princess Dongyang 東陽公主 d 701 ninth daughter Married Gao Luxing of Bohai Duke Shen 渤海 高履行 the first son of Gao Shilian Princess Qinghe 清河公主 624 664 personal name Jing 敬 11th daughter Married Cheng Huailiang Duke Dong a 程懷亮 the second son of Cheng Zhijie in 633 Princess Lanling 蘭陵公主 628 659 personal name Shu 淑 19th daughter Married Dou Huaizhe of Henan 河南 竇懷悊 in 636 and had issue one daughter Princess Jin an 晉安公主 13th daughter Married Wei Si an of Jingzhao 京兆 韋思安 Married Yang Renlu of Hongnong 弘農 楊仁輅 Princess Ankang 安康公主 14th daughter Married Dugu Mou of Henan 河南 獨孤謀 in 643 Princess Xinxing 新興公主 15th daughter Married Zhangsun Xi of Henan 河南 長孫曦 Princess Gaoyang 高陽公主 d 653 Married Fang Yi ai of Qinghe 清河 房遺愛 d 653 a son of Fang Xuanling in 648 Princess Jinshan 金山公主 18th daughter Princess Changshan 常山公主 20th daughterAncestry EditLi TianxiLi HuLady JiaLi Bing d 573 Empress JinglieEmperor Gaozu of Tang 566 635 Dugu KuzheDugu Xin 503 557 Lady FeilianEmpress YuanzhenEmperor Taizong of Tang 598 649 Dou LueDou YueDou Yi 519 583 Empress Taimu 569 613 Yuwen Gong 470 526 Yuwen Tai 507 556 Empress MingdePrincess XiangyangLiterary and other cultural references EditEmperor Taizong was the subject of a 64 chapter in eight volumes The Novel of the Prince of Qin of the Great Tang 大唐秦王詞話 Datang Qin Wang Cihua by Zhu Shenglin of the Ming Dynasty The novel is also known as The Biography of the Prince of Qin of the Tang Dynasty 唐秦王本傳 Romance of Tang 唐傳演義 and Romance of the Prince of Qin 秦王演義 Journey to the West details a fictional account of the origin of the Chinese door gods Emperor Taizong asked his generals Qin Shubao and Yuchi Gong to stand guard outside his bedroom to protect him from a vengeful spirit Television Cinema Edit Hong Kong s TVB produced a television series about Li Shimin s adventure based on The Novel of the Prince of Qin of the Great Tang 大唐秦王詞話 The Foundation a 1983 Hong Kong television series produced by TVB It featured a young Li Shimin prominently as one of its three leading characters Portrayed by Sean Lau in the 1987 TVB TV series The Grand Canal Portrayed by Wilson Lam in 1993 Taiwan s TTV 54 episodes TV series Tang Taizong Li Shimin Portrayed by Peter Ho in the 2004 TV series The Prince of Qin Li Shimin Portrayed by Shen Xiaohai in the 2006 TV series Initiating Prosperity Portrayed by Tang Guoqiang in the CCTV 1 TV series Carol of Zhenguan Portrayed by Ma Yue in the 2006 BTV TV series The Rise of the Tang Empire Portrayed by Seo In seok and Lee Joo hyeon in 2006 2007 SBS TV series Yeon Gaesomun Portrayed by Song Yong tae in the 2006 2007 KBS TV series Dae Jo Yeong Portrayed by Yu Shaoqun in the 2012 Hunan TV TV series Heroes of Sui and Tang Dynasties Portrayed by Yoon Seung won in the 2012 2013 KBS1 TV series Dream of the Emperor Portrayed by Du Chun in the 2013 Dragon TV TV series Heroes in Sui and Tang Dynasties Portrayed by Zhang Fengyi in the 2014 Hunan Television TV series The Empress of China Portrayed by Zheng Guo Lin in the 2014 TV series Heroes of Sui and Tang Dynasties 3 amp 4 Portrayed by Winston Chao in the 2016 movie Xuanzang Portrayed by Park Sung woong in the 2018 Korean film The Great Battle Portrayed by Geng Le in the 2021 Chinese TV series The Long Ballad 長歌行 Portrayed by Qin Junjie in the upcoming CCTV TV series Peace in Palace Peace in Chang An Portrayed by Ma Yue in the TV series Ode to Daughter of Great Tang Portrayed in the 2021 WEBNOVEL titled QUEEN JINDEOK by author TAIYANG DASHENGSee also Edit China portal History portal Biography portalChinese emperors family tree middle Turks in the Tang militaryReferences Edit Volume 191 of Zizhi Tongjian recorded that Taizong assumed the throne on the jiazi day of the 8th month of the 9th year of the Wude era of Tang Gaozu s reign This date corresponds to 4 Sep 626 on the Gregorian calendar 武德九年八月 甲子 太宗即皇帝位于东宫显德殿 Directory of historical figures Pasadena Salem Press 2000 p 613 ISBN 978 0 89356 334 9 Picken Laurence E R Nickson Noel J eds 2007 Music from the Tang Court Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 521 62100 7 Sen Tansen 2003 Buddhism diplomacy and trade Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 8248 2593 5 McNair Amy 2007 Donors of Longmen Faith politics and patronage in medieval Chinese Buddhist sculpture Honolulu University of Hawaii press p 88 ISBN 978 0 8248 2994 0 New Book of Tang vol 13 Zizhi Tongjian vol 282 万方数据知识服务平台 d wanfangdata com cn doi 10 3969 j issn 1004 3381 2019 08 062 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Zizhi Tongjian Scroll 249 a b Wechsler Howard J Twitchett Dennis C 1979 Denis C Twitchett John K Fairbank eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 3 Sui and T ang China 589 906 Part I Cambridge University Press pp 225 227 ISBN 978 0 521 21446 9 CHofC vol 3 p 189 Bo Yang Outlines of the History of Chinese vol 2 pp 495 499 Jack W Chen The Poetics of Sovereignty On Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty pp 14 Victor Cunrui Xiong 2009 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras No 19 Edited by John Woronoff Lanham Toronto Plymouth The Scarecrow Press p 26 ISBN 0 8108 6053 8 Xiong 2006 pp 63 4 Poon Vincent 10 February 2017 The Emperor s Preface to the Sacred Teachings Vincent s Calligraphy Retrieved 24 February 2017 Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall 1st ed New York Doubleday p 71 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 OCLC 123079516 Patricia Buckley Ebrey 2010 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge University Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 521 12433 1 Jonathan Karem Skaff 2009 Nicola Di Cosmo ed Military Culture in Imperial China Harvard University Press pp 183 185 ISBN 978 0 674 03109 8 See e g Zizhi Tongjian vol 196 Jenkins Peter 2008 The Lost History of Christianity the Thousand Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East Africa and Asia and How It Died New York Harper Collins pp 65 ISBN 978 0 06 147280 0 Adshead 1995 pp 104 106 a b Hirth Friedrich 2000 1885 Jerome S Arkenberg ed East Asian History Sourcebook Chinese Accounts of Rome Byzantium and the Middle East c 91 B C E 1643 C E Fordham edu Fordham University Retrieved 14 September 2016 Ball 2016 pp 152 153 see endnote 114 Yule 1915 pp 48 49 Yule 1915 pp 54 55 Schafer 1985 pp 10 25 26 Luttwak 2009 p 168 Yule 1915 pp 29 31 footnote No 3 on p 31 a b Yule 1915 p 30 footnote No 2 on p 30 Yule 1915 p 29 footnote No 4 on p 29 The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature Vol 1 Cambridge University Press 2010 p 273 Liu 劉 Xu 昫 945 舊唐書 Old Book of Tang Vol 3 Emperor Taizong According to the Old book of Tang the number of soldiers in Battle of Zhubi 駐蹕之戰 was different with 40000 Tang soldiers against over 100000 Goguryeo troops allied with Mohe 靺鞨 tribes Kenneth Scott Latourette 1964 The Chinese Their History and Culture Vols 1 2 4th ed reprint ed Macmillan p 144 Retrieved 8 February 2012 Drompp 2005 p 126 Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall 1st ed New York Doubleday pp 70 71 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 OCLC 123079516 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Wang Qinruo 1960 冊府元龜 Premier tortoise in the storehouse of books Beijing Zhonghua Book Company Xiuquin Zhou http www sino platonic org complete spp187 taizong emperor pdf Zhaoling The Mausoleum of Emperor Tang Taizong Sino Platonic Papers No 187 April 2009 p 140 Xiuquin Zhou http www sino platonic org complete spp187 taizong emperor pdf Zhaoling The Mausoleum of Emperor Tang Taizong Sino Platonic Papers No 187 April 2009 Bishop Charles W Horses of T ang T ai Tsung The Museum Journal Volume IX Nos 3 4 Page Fig Plate 265 272 figs 75 76 1918 vol 61 She was the wife of Emperor Taizong s full brother Li Yuanji Given in final version as of 754 Listen help info His status as co founder on par with Gaozu appeared certain by the time the Southern Tang which claimed inheritance of Tang heritage was established as its founding emperor Emperor Liezu Li Bian recognized that status by treating Emperors Gaozu and Taizong as well as his adoptive father Xu Wen all as founders of his state 7 territories within his empire He took the title Heavenly Khan thus designating himself as their ruler A little later the Western Turks although then at the height of their power were badly defeated and the Uighurs a Turkish tribe were detached from them and became sturdy supporters of the T ang in the Gobi The Khitan Mongols in Eastern Mongolia and Southern Manchuria made their submission 630 In the Tarim basin 34 a b c Xu Jingzong Gao Jifu and Zhang Xingcheng were referred to as de facto chancellors by the New Book of Tang 41 but this appeared to be a temporary measure during the Goguryeo campaign with Emperor Taizong out of Tang territory and Li Zhi in charge temporarily Xu Gao Zhang each of whom would be later made chancellor were not again referred to as chancellors until they were made chancellors after Emperor Taizong s death even though they were not explicitly removed Bibliography EditAdshead S A M 1995 1988 China in World History 2nd ed New York Palgrave Macmillan and St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 333 62132 5 Andrade Tonio 2016 The Gunpowder Age China Military Innovation and the Rise of the West in World History Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13597 7 Asimov M S 1998 History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume IV The age of achievement A D 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Part One The historical social and economic setting UNESCO Publishing Ball Warwick 2016 Rome in the East Transformation of an Empire 2nd ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 72078 6 Barfield Thomas 1989 The Perilous Frontier Nomadic Empires and China Basil Blackwell Barrett Timothy Hugh 2008 The Woman Who Discovered Printing Great Britain Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12728 7 alk paper Beckwith Christopher I 1987 The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans Turks Arabs and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages Princeton University Press Bregel Yuri 2003 An Historical Atlas of Central Asia Brill Drompp Michael Robert 2005 Tang China and the Collapse of the Uighur Empire A Documentary History Brill Ebrey Patricia Buckley 1999 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 66991 X paperback Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2006 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 13384 4 Golden Peter B 1992 An Introduction to the History of the Turkic Peoples Ethnogenesis and State Formation in Medieval and Early Modern Eurasia and the Middle East OTTO HARRASSOWITZ WIESBADEN Graff David A 2002 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 Warfare and History London Routledge ISBN 0415239559 Graff David Andrew 2016 The Eurasian Way of War Military Practice in Seventh Century China and Byzantium Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 46034 7 Haywood John 1998 Historical Atlas of the Medieval World AD 600 1492 Barnes amp Noble Latourette Kenneth Scott 1964 The Chinese their history and culture Volumes 1 2 Macmillan Lorge Peter A 2008 The Asian Military Revolution from Gunpowder to the Bomb Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60954 8 Luttwak Edward N 2009 The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Millward James 2009 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press Needham Joseph 1986 Science amp Civilisation in China vol V 7 The Gunpowder Epic Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30358 3 Rong Xinjiang 2013 Eighteen Lectures on Dunhuang Brill Schafer Edward H 1985 The Golden Peaches of Samarkand A study of T ang Exotics University of California Press Shaban M A 1979 The ʿAbbasid Revolution Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29534 3 Sima Guang 2015 柏楊版資治通鑑54皇后失蹤 Yuǎnliu chubǎnshiye gǔfen yǒuxian gōngsi ISBN 978 957 32 0876 1 Skaff Jonathan Karam 2012 Sui Tang China and Its Turko Mongol Neighbors Culture Power and Connections 580 800 Oxford Studies in Early Empires Oxford University Press Twitchett Denis C 1979 The Cambridge History of China Vol 3 Sui and T ang China 589 906 Cambridge University Press Wang Zhenping 2013 Tang China in Multi Polar Asia A History of Diplomacy and War University of Hawaii Press Wilkinson Endymion 2015 Chinese History A New Manual 4th edition Cambridge MA Harvard University Asia Center distributed by Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674088467 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2000 Sui Tang Chang an A Study in the Urban History of Late Medieval China Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies U OF M CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES ISBN 0892641371 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2006 Emperor Yang of the Sui Dynasty His Life Times and Legacy Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 9780791482681 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2009 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China United States of America Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0810860537 Xu Elina Qian 2005 Historical Development of the Pre Dynastic Khitan Institute for Asian and African Studies 7 Xue Zongzheng 1992 Turkic peoples 中国社会科学出版社 Yuan Shu 2001 柏楊版通鑑記事本末28第二次宦官時代 Yuǎnliu chubǎnshiye gǔfen yǒuxian gōngsi ISBN 957 32 4273 7 Yule Henry 1915 Cathay and the Way Thither Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China Vol I Preliminary Essay on the Intercourse Between China and the Western Nations Previous to the Discovery of the Cape Route Hakluyt SocietyFurther reading Edit Old Book of Tang vols 2 3 New Book of Tang vol 2 Zizhi Tongjian vols 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 Hirth Friedrich 2000 1885 Jerome S Arkenberg ed East Asian History Sourcebook Chinese Accounts of Rome Byzantium and the Middle East c 91 B C E 1643 C E Fordham edu Fordham University Retrieved 10 September 2016 Luttwak Edward N 2009 The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire Cambridge and London The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03519 5 Schafer Edward H 1985 1963 The Golden Peaches of Samarkand A study of T ang Exotics 1st paperback ed Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05462 8 Twitchett Dennis ed 1979 The Cambridge History of China Volume 3 Sui and T ang China 589 906 AD Part 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 21446 9 See especially Ch 4 T ai tsung 626 49 the Consolidator p 150 to 241 Yule Henry 1915 Henri Cordier ed Cathay and the Way Thither Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China Vol I Preliminary Essay on the Intercourse Between China and the Western Nations Previous to the Discovery of the Cape Route London Hakluyt Society Accessed 21 September 2016 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Emperor Taizong of Tang The biographies of the sons in Traditional Chinese 唐太宗百字箴与百字铭Emperor Taizong of TangHouse of LiBorn 28 January 598 Died 10 July 649Regnal titlesPreceded byEmperor Gaozu of Tang Emperor of the Tang dynasty626 649 Succeeded byEmperor Gaozong of TangEmperor of China most regions 626 649Preceded byLiang Shidu Emperor of Liang Emperor of China Northern Shaanxi Western Inner Mongolia 628 649 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emperor Taizong of Tang amp oldid 1142430643, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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