-
Emperor Daowu of
Northern Wei ((北)魏道武帝; 4
August 371 – 6
November 409),
personal name
Tuoba Gui (拓拔珪), né
Tuoba Shegui (拓拔渉珪), was the
founding emperor...
-
Queen Ji,
personal name unknown,
formally Queen Daowu, of the Wei
lineage of the Ji clan of Wei (悼武后 姬姓 魏氏), a
princess of Wei by
birth (4th
century BC)...
-
formally Empress Daowu (道武皇后), was an
empress of the Xianbei-led
Northern Wei
dynasty of China. Her
husband was the
founding emperor Emperor Daowu (Tuoba Gui)...
- the
Former Qin
state began to
break apart. By 386,
Tuoba Gui (Emperor
Daowu of
Northern Wei), the son (or grandson) of
Tuoba Shiyiqian (the last Prince...
- 409, when he was a low-level
official in
Emperor Daowu's administration. At that time,
Emperor Daowu was
often violent and
arbitrary in his actions, because...
- (魏冉) and King
Wuling of Zhao and
ascended to the throne. Queens:
Queen Daowu, of the Wei
lineage of the Ji clan of Wei (悼武后 姬姓 魏氏), a
princess of Wei...
- and the
House of Tufa respectively) The
Northern Wei founder, the
Emperor Daowu of
Northern Wei, and the
Southern Liang founder, the
Prince Wu of Southern...
-
dynasty of China. He was the
oldest son of the
founding emperor Emperor Daowu.
During his reign,
Northern Wei's
territory did not
expand as much as it...
-
launch a revolt. The
unrest continues until 417. Mingyuan, age 17,
succeeds Daowu as
emperor of the
Chinese Northern Wei (one of the
Northern dynasties)....
- its
capital at
Shengle (near
modern Hohhot).
Under the rule of
Emperors Daowu (Tuoba Gui), Mingyuan, and Taiwu, the
Northern Wei
progressively expanded...