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Empress Dowager Lu



         


Format of naming convention in English is under discussion at Pinyin: Lü Taihou) (d.180 BC) was the principal imperial consort of the Emperor Gao of the Han Empire. Their children included then Emperor Hui and Princess Luyuan (魯元公主).

She is most remembered for being a power-hungry woman. According to legend, she conspired against Han Xin and Pang Yue; both were prominent generals and major contributors to the founding of the Han dynasty. Emperor Gao eliminated them after they revolted. During Emperor Gao's reign, several family members of the consort clan of Lü served in the Han's militia.

After Emperor Gao was killed in 195 BC by a stray arrow in a frontier skirmish, she murdered four of Emperor Gao's other sons to secure the authority of her emperor son, Emperor Hui. She also murdered the Concubine Qi. Her inhumane treatment of Concubine Qi terrified and dominated the gentle but weak Emperor Hui. Emperor Hui's infant sons, Shaodi Gong and Shaodi Hong, were installed as her puppets on the throne after Hui's death in 188 BC. Thus, real power rested in her hands for sixteen years.

During her regency, members of the Lü clan gradually took over important posts in the government; however, upon her death, officials that previously served under Emperor Gao, including Chen Ping, Zhou Bo and Guan Ying, eliminated the Lü clan and placed Emperor Wen on the throne.

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Personal information

Family name Lü (呂 Lü3) in Chinese
Given name Zhi (雉 zhì) in Chinese
Era name none
Father Lü Wen (呂文) of Danfu (單夫)
Mother
Husband Emperor Gao of Han China
Children Emperor Hui of Han China and Princess Luyuan
Duration of regency 188 BC-180 BC
Tomb
Temple name
Courtesy name
Posthumous name
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See also






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