Zhang Huiguang

Chinese Empress

Zhang Huiguang (Chinese: 張徽光) (died 313), formally Empress Wuxiao (Chinese: 武孝皇后, literally "the martial and filial empress"), was an empress of the Xiongnu-led Chinese Han-Zhao dynasty. She was Liu Cong (Emperor Zhaowu)'s second wife.

Zhang Huiguang was the daughter of Zhang Shi (張寔, not to be confused as the Jin official whose domain later evolved into Former Liang), the nephew of Liu Cong's mother Empress Dowager Zhang. In 312, at Empress Dowager Zhang's insistence, Liu Cong took Zhang Huiguang and her sister to be his concubines. Later that year, he wanted to create another concubine, Liu Ying (劉英), empress, but Empress Zhang insisted that he create Zhang Huiguang empress. He did so in early 313. Three months later, Empress Dowager Zhang died.[1] Empress Zhang mourned her so greatly and was so depressed that she died as well.

References

  1. ^ "資治通鑑/卷088 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". zh.wikisource.org (in Chinese). Retrieved 2022-10-20.
Chinese royalty
Preceded by
Empress Huyan
Empress of Han-Zhao
313
Succeeded by
Empress Liu E
  • v
  • t
  • e
Empresses, queens, and princesses of the Sixteen Kingdoms
Empresses, queens, and princesses consort
Cheng-Han (304–347)
  • Empress Ren
  • Empress Yan
  • Empress Yan
  • Empress Li
Han-Zhao (304–329)
Later Zhao (319–351)
Former Liang (320–376)Former Yan (337–370)
Former Qin (351–394)
Later Yan (384–409)
Later Qin (384–417)Western Qin (385–431)Later Liang (386–403)
Southern Liang (397–414)Northern Liang (397–460)Southern Yan (398–410)
Xia (407–431)
Northern Yan (407–436)Ran Wei (350–352)
  • Empress Dong
Empresses and princesses dowager
Han-Zhao (304–329)
  • Empress Dowager Zhang
Later Zhao (319–351)Former Yan (337–370)Former Qin (351–394)Later Yan (384–409)
Later Liang (386–403)
  • Empress Dowager Wei
Southern Yan (398–410)
  • Empress Dowager Duan
Western Liang (400–421)
Posthumous empresses
Later Yan (384–409)
Xia → Shang → Zhou → Qin → Han → 3 Kingdoms → Jìn / 16 Kingdoms → S. Dynasties / N. Dynasties → Sui → Tang → 5 Dynasties & 10 Kingdoms → Liao / Song / W. Xia / Jīn → Yuan → Ming → Qing
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
National
  • United States
Stub icon

This Chinese biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e