'Chinese sovereign' is the ruler of a particular period in ancient
China. Several titles and naming schemes have been used throughout history.
Terminology
King title
The ''king'' or ''wang'' (王 wáng) was the
Chinese head of state from the
Zhou Dynasty to the
Qin Dynasty. After that, ''wang'' (sometimes translated "prince") became merely the head of the hierarchy of noble ranks. The title was commonly given to members of the Emperor's family and could be inherited.
Emperor of China title
The characters ''Huang'' (皇 huáng "god-king") and ''Di'' (帝 dì "sage king") had been used separately and never consecutively (see
Three August Ones and Five Emperors). The character was reserved for
mythological rulers until the first emperor of Qin (
Qin Shi Huang), who created a new title ''Huangdi'' (皇帝 in
pinyin: huáng dì) for himself in 221 BCE, which is commonly translated as ''
Emperor'' in English. This title continued in use until the fall of the
Qing dynasty in
1911.
From the
Han Dynasty, the title ''Huangdi'' could also be
abbreviated to ''huang'' or ''di''. The former nobility titles ''Qing'' (卿), ''Daifu'' (大夫) and ''Shi'' (仕) became
synonyms for court officials.
Although formally the 天子 ''tiānzǐ'' (literally, "'Son of Heaven (the celestial heavens or the universe)'"), the power of the emperor varied between emperors and dynasties, with some emperors being absolute rulers and others being figureheads with actual power lying in the hands of court factions,
eunuchs, the bureaucracy or noble families. In principle, the title of emperor was transmitted from father to son via
primogeniture, as endorsed by
Confucianism. However, there are many exceptions to this rule. For example, because the Emperor usually had many wives, the first born of the queen (i.e. the first wife) is usually the
heir apparent. However, Emperors could elevate another more favoured child or the child of a more favoured wife to the status of
Crown Prince. Disputes over succession occurred regularly and have led to a number of civil wars. In the
Qing dynasty, primogeniture was abandoned altogether, with the designated heir kept secret until after the Emperor's death.
Unlike the
Japanese emperor for example, Chinese political theory allowed for a change of dynasty as imperial families could be replaced. This is based on the concept of "
Mandate of Heaven." The theory behind this was that the Chinese emperor acted as the "
Son of Heaven." As the only legitimate ruler, his authority extended to "
All under heaven" and had neighbors only in a geographical sense. He holds a mandate to which he had a valid claim to rule over (or to lead) everyone else in the world as long as he served the people well. If the ruler became immoral, then rebellion is justified and heaven would take away that mandate and give it to another. This single most important concept legitimized the dynastic cycle or the change of dynasties regardless of social or ethnic background. This principle made it possible for dynasties founded by non-noble families such as
Han Dynasty and
Ming Dynasty or non-ethnic Han dynasties such as the Mongol-led
Yuan Dynasty and
Manchu-led
Qing Dynasty. It was moral integrity and benevolent leadership that determined the holder of the "Mandate of Heaven." Every dynasty that self-consciously adopted this administrative practice powerfully reinforced this
Sinocentric concept throughout the history of imperial China. Historians noted that this was one of the key reasons why imperial China in many ways had the most efficient system of government in ancient times.
Finally, it was generally not possible for a female to succeed to the throne and in the history of China there has only been one reigning Empress,
Wu Zetian (624-705 CE) who usurped power under the
Tang dynasty.
How to read the titles of a Chinese sovereign
All sovereigns are denoted by a string of
Chinese characters.
Examples:
# Hàn 'Gāo Zǔ' ''Liú Bāng'' (漢 '高祖' ''劉邦'')
# Táng 'Tài Zōng' ''Lǐ Shì Mín'' (唐 '太宗' ''李世民'')
# Hòu Hàn 'Gāo Zǔ' ''Liú Zhī Yuǎn'' (後漢 '高祖' ''劉知遠'')
# Hàn 'Guāng Wǔ Dì' ''Liú Xiù'' (漢 '光武帝' ''劉秀'')
The first character(s) are the name of the dynasty or kingdom.
e.g. Hàn, Táng, Wèi and Hòu Hàn.
Then come the characters of how the sovereign is commonly called, in most cases the
posthumous names or the
temple names.
e.g. 'Gāo Zǔ', 'Tài Zōng', 'Wǔ Dì', 'Guāng Wǔ Dì'.
Then follow the characters of their family and given names.
e.g. ''Liú Bāng'', ''Lǐ Shì Mín'', ''Cáo Cāo'', ''Liú Zhī Yuǎn'' and ''Liú Xiù''.
In contemporary historical texts, the string including the name of dynasty and temple or posthumous names is sufficient enough as a clear reference to a particular sovereign.
e.g. Hàn 'Gāo Zǔ'
Note that Wèi 'Wǔ Dì' ''Cáo Cāo'' was never a sovereign in his own right but his son was. Thus his imperial style of 'Wǔ Dì' was added only after his son had ascended to the throne. Such cases were common in Chinese history, i.e., the first emperor of a new dynasty often accorded posthumous imperial titles to his father or sometimes even further paternal ancestors.
Rules of thumb and tips
All sovereigns starting from the
Tang Dynasty are contemporarily referred to using the temple names. They also had posthumous names that were less used, except in traditional historical texts. The situation was reversed before Tang as posthumous names were contemporarily used.
e.g. The posthumous name of Táng 'Tài Zōng' ''Lǐ Shì Mín'' was 'Wén Dì' ('文帝')
If sovereigns since Tang were referenced using posthumous names, they were the last ones of their sovereignties or their reigns were short and unpopular.
e.g. Táng 'Āi Dì' ''Lǐ Zhù'' ('唐哀帝' ''李柷''), also known as Táng 'Zhāo Xuān Dì' (唐'昭宣帝'), was last emperor of the
Tang Dynasty reigning from
904 to
907.
Hàn 'Guāng Wǔ Dì' is equivalent to Dōng Hàn 'Guāng Wǔ Dì' since he was the founder of the Eastern (dōng)
Han Dynasty. All dōng (east)-xī (west), nán (south)-běi (north), qián (former)-hòu (later) conventions were invented only by past or present historiographers for denoting a new era of a dynasty. They were never used during that era.
Some common conventions
Here is a quick guide of the most common style of reference (but not a thorough explanation) in contemporary use. Using an emperor's different titles or styles is nevertheless considered correct but not as common.
# Emperors before the Tang dynasty: use dynasty name + posthumous names. e.g. Han Wu Di
# Emperors between Tang dynasty and Ming dynasty: use dynasty name + temple names e.g. Tang tai zong
# Emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties: use
era names (reign names) because most emperors had only one distinctive era name during their reign, e.g. Emperor Kangxi (康熙 kāng xī) of Qing. The exceptions are the first two emperors of the Qing Dynasty, and Emperor Yīngzōng (英宗) of Ming, who had two era names.
#:However, the use of era names makes many mistake these for the names of the emperors themselves, and many scholars therefore encourage a reversed wording for Ming and Qing emperors, e.g., the Kangxi Emperor, the Qianlong Emperor, et cetera. To be more precise,
and clear in English, one could use: the Kangxi era Emperor, etc.
# Overrides rules 1 to 3: If there is a more common convention than using posthumous, temple or era names, then use it. Examples include
Wu Zetian (the only female emperor in the Chinese history).
# Since all legitimate rulers of China after
Qin Shi Huang can be titled
Emperor of China, in English they can be referred to by "Emperor of" and the name of his respective dynasty after the temple or posthumous name. e.g.
#:Han wudi = Emperor wudi of Han Dynasty
#:Tang taizong = Emperor taizong of Tang Dynasty
# Some scholars prefer using the
Wade-Giles romanization instead of the
Pinyin but the above formats still hold. e.g. Han Wu Di = Wu-ti Emperor of Han Dynasty.
If you prefer better clarification and do not want to bother with all those "names," please refer to each dynasty, of which the specific convention is shown on top of its sovereigns.
See also
★
Table of Chinese monarchs
★
Emperor of China (
Era names,
Temple name,
Posthumous name)
★
Chinese noble
★
Chinese History (
Dynasty) (
Timeline)
★
Chinese Historiography
★
List of recipients of tribute from China
★
List of tributaries of Imperial China
★
Taiping Rebellion
★
Posterity of Heaven