- Li
Congke (simplified Chinese: 李从珂;
traditional Chinese: 李從珂; pinyin: Lǐ
Cóngkē) (11
February 885 – 11
January 937), also
known in
historiography as the...
- Siyuan's
adoptive son Li
Congke) due to his
battlefield accomplishments.
Despite the
familial relationship between Shi and Li
Congke and
their serving together...
-
ruling between 933 and 934. He was
overthrown by his
adopted brother Li
Congke. Li
Conghou was born in 914, when his
father Li
Siyuan was a
general of...
-
Kingdoms Period state Later Tang. Her
husband was
Later Tang's last
emperor Li
Congke. It is not
known when Lady Liu was born, but it is
known that she was from...
- (Emperor Min) and
adoptive son Li
Congke. Eventually, when her son-in-law Shi
Jingtang rebelled against Li
Congke,
establishing his own
Later Jin and...
-
serving briefly as a
chancellor during the
reign of its last
emperor Li
Congke. (Some
traditional sources written during the
subsequent Song
dynasty referred...
-
during Li
Congke's rebellion, Li
Chongmei was
effectively Li
Congke's only son (or
oldest —
although historical records did not
suggest that Li
Congke had any...
-
serving as the
chief of
staff (Shumishi) for
Later Tang's last
emperor Li
Congke.
Despite the high
position Han
Zhaoyin eventually achieved,
virtually nothing...
-
actions toward political enemies—including
Emperor Mingzong's
adoptive son Li
Congke the
Prince of Lu—created much resentment.
After the
campaign against the...
-
Congke, the
adoptive brother of then-reigning
emperor Li Conghou,
rebelled against Li Conghou, Wang was put in
command of the army
against Li
Congke,...