- Zhu
Gaoxu (30
December 1380 – 6
October 1426) was the
second son of the
Yongle Emperor and
Empress Renxiaowen.
During the
Jingnan campaign,
which brought...
- father's plan to
relocate the
capital from
Beijing to Nanjing. His
uncle Zhu
Gaoxu rebelled against the
young emperor but was
ultimately unsuccessful. With...
-
third son of the
Yongle Emperor and an ally of his
second brother, Zhu
Gaoxu, who was the
rival to
their eldest brother, Zhu Gaochi, in the
power struggle...
-
appointed Zhu
Gaoxu as the
Prince of Han and
entrusted him with
control of Yunnan. Zhu
Gaosui became the
Prince of Zhao,
based in Beijing. Zhu
Gaoxu refused...
- Zhu
Gaoxu rebellion (simplified Chinese: 高煦之乱;
traditional Chinese: 高煦之亂), also
known as the
Dingnan Incident (定難之變), was a
rebellion by Zhu
Gaoxu, the...
- by
Yongle Emperor for his secondson, Zhu
Gaoxu. The
princedom later abolished by
Xuande Emperor after the
Gaoxu Rebellion. As
members of this princedom...
- his
younger brothers, Zhu
Gaoxu and Zhu Gaosui. In
September 1414, when the
Yongle Emperor returned from Mongolia, Zhu
Gaoxu accused Zhu
Gaochi of neglecting...
- 朱高熾; 16
August 1378 – 29 May 1425), the
Yongle Emperor's
first son Zhu
Gaoxu,
Prince of Han (漢王 朱高煦; 30
December 1380 – 6
October 1426), the
Yongle Emperor's...
-
appointed his
eldest son and heir apparent, Zhu Gaochi, as regent. However, Zhu
Gaoxu, the
younger brother of the heir apparent,
attempted to
remove him from...
- Qiu Fu
advocated for the
appointment of the emperor's
second son, Zhu
Gaoxu, but in 1404, the
emperor chose his
eldest son Zhu
Gaochi as his successor...