Emperor Yingzong of Song

Emperor Yingzong of Song (16 February 1032 – 25 January 1067), personal name Zhao Shu, was the fifth emperor of the Song dynasty of China. His original personal name was Zhao Zongshi but it was changed to "Zhao Shu" in 1062 by imperial decree. He reigned from 1063 to his death in 1067. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Emperor Shenzong.

Emperor Yingzong of Song
宋英宗
Portrait kept in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan
Emperor of the Song dynasty
Reign1 May 1063 – 25 January 1067
Coronation1 May 1063
PredecessorEmperor Renzong
SuccessorEmperor Shenzong
BornZhao Zongshi (1036–1062)
Zhao Shu (1062–1067)
16 February 1032[a]
Died25 January 1067(1067-01-25) (aged 34)
Burial
Yonghou Mausoleum (永厚陵, in present-day Gongyi, Henan)
Consorts
(m. 1046⁠–⁠1067)
IssueEmperor Shenzong
Zhao Hao
Zhao Yan
Zhao Yun
Princess Hehui
Princess Xianhui
Princess Xiande
Princess De'an
Era dates
Zhiping (治平; 1064–1067)
Posthumous name
Emperor Tiqian Yingli Longgong Shengde Xianwen Suwu Ruisheng Xuanxiao (體乾應歷隆功盛德憲文肅武睿聖宣孝皇帝) (conferred in 1083)
Temple name
Yingzong (英宗)
HouseZhao
DynastySong (Northern Song)
FatherZhao Yunrang
MotherLady Ren
Signature
Emperor Yingzong of Song
Chinese宋英宗
Literal meaning"Heroic Ancestor of the Song"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSòng Yīngzōng
Zhao Shu
Traditional Chinese趙曙
Simplified Chinese赵曙
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhào Shǔ
Zhao Zongshi
Traditional Chinese趙宗實
Simplified Chinese赵宗实
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhào Zōngshí

Family background

edit

Emperor Yingzong was the 13th son of Zhao Yunrang (趙允讓; 969–1059), who was a first cousin of Emperor Renzong and was posthumously known as "Prince Anyi of Pu" (濮安懿王). Emperor Yingzong's grandfather, Zhao Yuanfen (趙元份; 966–1005), was a younger brother of Emperor Renzong's father, Emperor Zhenzong, and was posthumously known as "Prince Gongjing of Shang" (商恭靖王). Emperor Yingzong's mother, whose maiden family name was Ren (), was the concubine of Zhao Yunrang. She held the title "Xianjun[b] of Xianyou" (仙遊縣君).

Early life

edit

In 1055, Emperor Yingzong's predecessor, Emperor Renzong, became critically ill and started to worry about having no successor because his sons all died prematurely. Acting on the advice of his ministers, Emperor Renzong agreed to bring two of his younger male relatives into his palace. One of them was the future Emperor Yingzong, who was eventually chosen and designated as the Crown Prince. Yingzong had his name changed to "Zhao Shu" in 1062 when he was officially designated as the Crown Prince. This name became his official name when he ascended the throne in the following year after his adoptive father Emperor Renzong died in 1063.

Reign

edit

Emperor Yingzong's empress consort was Empress Gao, a niece of Empress Dowager Cao who was the widow of Emperor Renzong. As Emperor Yingzong was severely sickly shortly after his coronation, Empress Dowager Cao served as his regent. However, Empress Dowager Cao held onto power even when Yingzong recovered until the Prime Minister Han Qi removed the screen from the audience hall making it impossible for Empress Dowager Cao to attend. She was forced to give power back to Yingzong.

Emperor Yingzong's reign is known for controversy over the correct rituals to be performed by the emperor for his father. Emperor Yingzong had been adopted by Emperor Renzong, so Emperor Renzong was nominally Emperor Yingzong's father. However, biologically, Zhao Yunrang was Emperor Yingzong's father. Some officials suggested that Emperor Yingzong honour his biological father with the title "Imperial Uncle", but the emperor agreed with Ouyang Xiu and others and decided to honour his biological father as his parent. This was not only an early sign of more conflict during Emperor Xiaozong's reign but also the Great Rites Controversy of the Ming dynasty.

On April 7, 1063, Yingzong sent gifts including calligraphy made by Emperor Renzong to the Vietnamese King Ly Thanh Tong.[1] Later, Than Thieu Thai raided Guangnan West Circuit prompting local officials to seek help from Yingzong but he ignored them leaving defences up to them although he branded Than Thieu Thai as "reckless and mad.”[2]

In 1065 AD, Emperor Yingzong ordered the great historian Sima Guang (1019–1086 AD) to lead with other scholars such as his chief assistants Liu Shu, Liu Ban and Fan Zuyu,[3] the compilation of a universal history of China.

He died in 1067, caused by an illness that Yingzong contracted in 1066.[4] He was succeeded by his son Zhao Xu who took the throne name Emperor Shenzong.

Emperor Yingzong had always been mentally ill, often distracted, physically weak, and depressed causing him to have health problems which contributed to his death at a young age.[5]

Family

edit

Consorts and Issue:

    • Sons
      • Zhao Xu, Shenzong (神宗 趙頊; 1048–1085), first son
      • Zhao Hao, Prince Wurong (吳榮王 趙顥; 1050–1096), second son
      • Zhao Yan, Prince Run (潤王 趙顏), third son
      • Zhao Yun, Prince Yiduanxian (益端獻王 趙頵; 1056–1088), fourth son
    • Daughters
      • Princess Hehui (惠和帝姬; d. 1085), first daughter
        • Married Wang Shiyue (王師約) in 1066
      • Princess Xianhui (賢惠帝姬; 1051–1080), second daughter
        • Married Wang Shen (1036–1093), and had issue (one son)
      • Princess Xiande (賢德帝姬; 1051–1123), third daughter
        • Married Zhang Dunli (張敦禮; d. 1107) in 1068, and had issue (one son, one daughter)
      • Princess De'an (德安帝姬)
        • Married Xu Jue (許珏), and had issue (two sons)


  • Zhaoyi, of the Bao clan (昭儀 鮑氏)
  • Xiurong, of the Zhang clan (张修容)
  • Guiyi, of the Zhang clan (贵仪张氏)
  • Cairen, of the Yang clan (才人杨氏)

Ancestry

edit
Emperor Taizong of Song (939–997)
Zhao Yuanfen (969–1005)
Zhao Yunrang (995–1059)
Li Hanbin
Lady Li
Emperor Yingzong of Song (1032–1067)
Ren Gu
Lady Ren
Lady Zhang

See also

edit

References

edit
  • Anderson, James A. (2008). "'Treacherous Factions': Shifting Frontier Alliances in the Breakdown of Sino-Vietnamese Relations on the Eve of the 1075 Border War", in Battlefronts Real and Imagined: War, Border, and Identity in the Chinese Middle Period, 191–226. Edited by Don J. Wyatt. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6084-9.
  1. ^ Anderson (2008), 200.
  2. ^ Anderson (2008), 201.
  3. ^ Xu Elina-Qian, p.20
  4. ^ Other sources say he collapsed.
  5. ^ Davis, Richard L. "Troubles in Paradise: the Shrinking Royal Family in Southern Song" (PDF). National Palace Museum.
  1. ^ Dates given here are in the Julian calendar not the proleptic Gregorian calendar.
  2. ^ Xianjun was a title literally meaning "first lady of the county," which was given to the wives of a certain category of Chinese civil servants in imperial times.
Emperor Yingzong of Song
Born: 16 February 1032 Died: 25 January 1067
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of the Song Dynasty
1063–1067
Succeeded by
  NODES
Note 1