Site Navigation
Categories:
Han Dynasty emperors
156 BC births
87 BC deaths
2nd century BC people
1st century BC people
Articles needing additional references from November 2007
Articles containing non-English language text
Articles containing traditional Chinese language text

Summary Of: Emperor Wu of Han China

Encyclodia Page On: Emperor Wu of Han China

These Are Links To Other Documents
| citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | 157 BC | 87 BC | Family name | Liu | Given name | Courtesy name | Father | Emperor Jing of Han | Mother | Empress Wang Zhi (王娡) | Wives | Empress Chen Jiao (陳嬌) | Empress Wei Zifu (衛子夫) | Crown Prince | Ju (劉據), Crown Prince Li | Fuling (劉弗陵), Crown Prince | Children | Ju (劉據), Crown Prince Li | Fuling (劉弗陵), Crown Prince | 141 BC | 87 BC | Dynasty | Former/ Western Han | Era name | 140 BC | 135 BC | 134 BC | 129 BC | 128 BC | 123 BC | 122 BC | 117 BC | 116 BC | 111 BC | 110 BC | 105 BC | 104 BC | 101 BC | 100 BC | 97 BC | 96 BC | 93 BC | 92 BC | 89 BC | 88 BC | 87 BC | Temple name | Posthumous name | Posthumous name | proleptic Julian calendar | proleptic Gregorian calendar | Emperor Jing | Emperor Gaozu | 150 BC | 148 | 209 | simplified Chinese | traditional Chinese | pinyin | Wade-Giles | 156 BC | March 29 | 87 BC | emperor | Han Dynasty | China | 141 BC | 87 BC | Confucian | Chinese history | Kyrgyzstan | Korea | Vietnam | Xiongnu | Zhang Qian | 139 BC | Yuezhi | Uzbekistan | Central Asia | Buddhism | Mogao Caves | first | census | Confucianism | Kangxi Emperor | Emperor Jing | concubines | Consort Wang Zhi | 156 BC | Emperor Gao | Emperor Wen | 153 BC | Empress Bo | 153 BC | 151 BC | Chen Jiao | Consort Qi | Emperor Gao | Empress Dowager Lü | 150 BC | 141 BC | Empress Dowager Dou | Empress Wang | Chen Jiao | 140 BC | Confucianism | Dong Zhongshu | 139 BC | Taoism | Wei Zifu | suicide | Wei Qing | 135 BC | 138 BC | Minyue | Fujian | Donghai | Zhejiang | Yangtze | Huai | 135 BC | Nanyue | Liu An | Xiongnu | heqin | Xiongnu | 133 BC | Chanyu | Shuozhou | Shanxi | Emperor Wu dispatching Zhang Qian to Central Asia from 138 to 126 BCE, Mogao Caves mural, 618-712 CE. | | Zhang Qian | Central Asia | 138 | 126 BCE | Mogao Caves | 129 BC | Zhangjiakou | Hebei | Li Guang | Wei Qing | 127 BC | Inner Mongolia | Ordos | 124 BC | Huo Qubing | 121 BC | grazing | Xinjiang | Soviet | central Asia | 139 BC | Zhang Qian | Yuezhi | Gansu | 129 BC | Samarkand | Dayuan | Kokand | Kangju | Chang'an | 126 BC | Han Wudi sent ambassadors to the Dian Kingdom in Yunnan. Bronze sculpture depicting Dian people, 3rd century BCE. | | Dian Kingdom | Yunnan | Yelang | Zunyi | Guizhou | Yibin | Sichuan | India | Parthia | 122 BC | Dian | Yunnan | Korean | 126 BC | immortality | magicians | 130 BC | Empress Chen | Consort Wei | 128 BC | Liu Ju | 122 BC | 122 BC | Liu An | Emperor Wu worshipping two statues of Golden Man (or Buddha) in 120 BC, Mogao Caves, Dunhuang, ca. 8th century CE.  (However, note that there is no historical record of Emperor Wu actually being aware of Buddhism. The first confirmed contact between a Chinese emperor and Buddhist doctrines would not happen until a century later, during the reign of Emperor Ming.) | | Buddha | 120 BC | Mogao Caves | Dunhuang | Emperor Ming | 119 BC | Li Guang | heqin | Hohhot | Inner Mongolia | 117 BC | 113 BC | Chang'an | immortality | Luan Da | 112 BC | Nanyue | Guangdong | Guangxi | Vietnam | coup d'etat | 111 BC | Guangzhou | Minyue | Fujian | 110 BC | Yangtze | Huai | Mount Tai | 98 BC | Sang Hongyang | 109 BC | Wei Man | Joseon | Pyongyang | Jin | Liaoning | Chang'an | 109 BC | Yunnan | 108 BC | Loulan | Taklamakan Desert | Turpan | Xinjiang | 105 BC | Wusun | Issyk Kol | Dayuan | Kokand | 104 BC | 103 BC | 102 BC | 103 BC | 119 BC | Su Wu | 99 BC | Li Ling | Sima Qian | Shiji | Emperor Jing | 106 BC | Regions | 104 BC | Xiao He | Emperor Gao | 100 BC | peasant revolts | 96 BC | Empress Wei | Wei Qing | 91 BC | 94 BC | Liu Fuling | Emperor Yao | Empress Wei | Wei Qing | 106 BC | Xianyang | Shaanxi | Ying Fusu | Chang'an | Liu Bingyi | Sanmenxia | Henan | 90 BC | 89 BC | Emperor Gao | Liu Bingyi | 88 BC | Liu Dan | Huo Guang | Empress Lü | Jin Midi | 87 BC | Emperor Zhao | Empress Wei | Chinese pyramids | Xiongnu | China proper | Roman Empire | Confucianism | Confucianism | monarchy | 1911 | Qin Shi Huang | legalist | Castration | Da Han Tian Zi | Han Wu Da Di | Emperor Ai | Dong Xian | homosexual | poet | concubines | Emperor Jing of Han | Empress Wang Zhi | Empress Chen Jiao | Empress Wei Zifu | Crown Prince Li | Liu Ju | Crown Prince Li | Liu Fuling | Emperor Zhao of Han | Crown Prince Li | Emperor Xuan of Han | Emperor Xuan of Han | Crown Prince Li | 140 BC | 135 BC | 134 BC | 129 BC | 128 BC | 123 BC | 122 BC | 117 BC | 116 BC | 111 BC | 110 BC | 105 BC | 104 BC | 101 BC | 100 BC | 97 BC | 96 BC | 93 BC | 92 BC | 89 BC | 88 BC | 87 BC | Zizhi Tongjian | Sima Guang | Bo Yang | Shi Ji | Sima Qian | Han Shu | Ban Gu | ISBN 0-07-043424-7 | Wikimedia Commons | August 27 | Bo Yang | Zizhi Tongjian | ISBN 0-07-043424-7 | Emperor Jing of Han | Emperor of the Han Dynasty | 141 BC | 87 BC | Emperor Zhao of Han | Categories | Han Dynasty emperors | 156 BC births | 87 BC deaths | 2nd century BC people | 1st century BC people | Articles needing additional references from November 2007 | Articles containing non-English language text | Articles containing traditional Chinese language text |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Emperor Wu of Han China".