Yang Guang | |||||||||||||
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Emperor of China | |||||||||||||
Reign | August 21, 604 – April 11, 618 | ||||||||||||
Born | 569 | ||||||||||||
Died | 11 April 618 (aged 49) Danyang, Sui China |
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Burial | Jiangdu | ||||||||||||
Spouse |
Princess Xiao of Western Liang Consort Xiao, concubine Consort Chen, concubine Consort Cai, concubine Consort Chen Chou, concubine Consort Wang, concubine |
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Issue |
Yang Zhao, Crown Prince Yuande Yang Jian, Prince of Qi Yang Gao, Prince of Zhao Princess Nanyang Consort Yang |
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House | Sui Dynasty | ||||||||||||
Father | Emperor Wen of Sui | ||||||||||||
Mother | Duchess Dugu Qieluo |
Full name | |
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Yang Guang 楊廣 | |
Posthumous name | |
Per Tang Dynasty: Yang 煬 "slothful" Per Yang Tong: Ming 明 "understanding" Per Dou Jiande: Min 閔 "careful" |
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Temple name | |
Shizu 世祖 |
Emperor Yang of Sui (隋煬帝, 569 – April 11, 618), personal name Yang Guang (楊廣), alternative name Ying (英), nickname Amo (阿摩), known as Emperor Ming (明帝) during the brief reign of his grandson Yang Tong), was the second son of Emperor Wen of Sui, and the second emperor of China's Sui dynasty.
Emperor Yang's original name was Yang Ying, but was renamed by his father, after consulting with oracles, to Yang Guang. Yang Guang was made the Prince of Jin after Emperor Wen established Sui Dynasty in 581. In 588, he was granted command of the five armies that invaded the southern Chen dynasty and was widely praised for the success of this campaign. These military achievements, as well as his machinations against his older brother Yang Yong, led to him becoming crown prince in 600. After the death of his father in 604, generally considered, though unproven, by most traditional historians to be a murder ordered by Yang Guang, he ascended the throne as Emperor Yang.
Emperor Yang, ruling from 604 to 618, committed to several large construction projects, most notably the completion of the Grand Canal. He commanded the reconstruction of the Great Wall, a project which took the lives of nearly six million workers. He also ordered several military expeditions that brought Sui to its greatest territorial extent, one of which, the conquest of Champa in what is now central and southern Vietnam, resulted in the death of thousands of Sui soldiers from malaria. These expeditions, along with a series of disastrous campaigns against Goguryeo (one of the three kingdoms of Korea), left the empire bankrupt and a populace in revolt. With northern China in turmoil, Emperor Yang spent his last days in Jiangdu (江都, in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu), where he was eventually strangled in a coup led by his general Yuwen Huaji.