- Li
Conghou (Chinese: 李從厚) (914–934),
posthumous name
Emperor Min of
Later Tang (後唐閔帝),
childhood name
Pusanu (菩薩奴, "slave of a Bodhisattva"), was an emperor...
-
summoned Li
Conghou back from
Tianxiong (where Li
Conghou was
serving as
military governor), but died
before Li
Conghou arrived at Luoyang. Li
Conghou subsequently...
- took the
throne after overthrowing Emperor Mingzong's
biological son Li
Conghou (Emperor Min). He was
later himself overthrown by his brother-in-law Shi...
- (908–923),
Emperor of
Later Tang (923–926) Li Siyuan,
Emperor (926–933) Li
Conghou,
Emperor (933–934) Li Congke,
Emperor (934–937)
Later Jin (complete list)...
-
reigns of its
second emperor Li
Siyuan and Li Siyuan's son and
successor Li
Conghou. It is not
known when Feng Yun was born, but it is
known that he was from...
- • 923–926 Li
Cunxu (Zhuangzong) • 926–933 Li
Siyuan (Mingzong) • 933–934 Li
Conghou • 934–936 Li
Congke Historical era Five
Dynasties and Ten
Kingdoms Period...
-
subsequently suggested to Li
Siyuan that his son (by the
deceased Lady Xia) Li
Conghou marry Kong's daughter, and Li
Siyuan agreed. In 930, Li
Siyuan was prepared...
- and she was
empress dowager during the
subsequent reigns of his son Li
Conghou (Emperor Min) and
adoptive son Li Congke. Eventually, when her son-in-law...
-
imperial prince of the
Chinese Five
Dynasties and Ten
Kingdoms Period Li
Conghou,
emperor of the
Later Tang
dynasty Li Congrong, son of Li Siyuan, the second...
- Zhou. In 934, by
which time Li Siyuan's
biological son Li
Conghou was emperor, Li
Conghou's chiefs of
staff Zhu
Hongzhao and Feng Yun, su****ious of both...