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pinyin: Hàn wŭ dì, Wade-Giles. Han Wu-ti; 157 BC - 87 BC) was the sixth emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty. A military compaigner, Han China reached its greatest expansion under his reign, spanning from Kyrgyzstan in the west, Northern Korea in the Northeast, to Northern Vietnam in the south. He was best known for his role in expelling the Huns from the boundary of China.
Wu adopted the principles of Confucianism as the state philosophy and code of ethics for his empire.
| Family name | Liu (劉 liú) in Chinese |
| Given name | Che (徹 chè) in Chinese |
| Era name | Jianyuan (建元 py. jìan yúan) 140 BC-135 BC Yuanguang (元光 py. yúan gūang) 134 BC-129 BC |
| Father | Emperor Jing of Han China (eldest son of) |
| Mother | |
| Wives | Empress Chen (deposed 130 BC) Empress Wei (suicide 91 BC) |
| Major concubines | consort Li consort Zhao consort Li consort Wang |
| Children | at least 1 son, 4 daughters |
| Duration of reign | 141 BC-87 BC |
| Tomb | |
| Temple name | 世宗 (py. shìzōng), literary meaning: "genesis ancestor" |
| Courtesy name | |
| Posthumous name | 孝武 (py. xiào wŭ), literary meaning: "filial and martial" |
| Posthumous name in short | 武 (py. wŭ), literary meaning: "martial" |
| Preceded by: Emperor Jing of Han China |
Western Han Dynasty | Succeeded by: Emperor Zhao of Han China |