Western Liang (西涼) | ||||||||||
涼 | ||||||||||
Vassal of Later Qin, Jin Dynasty (265-420), Northern Wei, Liu Song | ||||||||||
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Capital |
Dunhuang (400-405, 420-421) Jiuquan (405-420) |
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Government | Monarchy | |||||||||
Duke | ||||||||||
• | 400-417 | Li Gao | ||||||||
• | 417-420 | Li Xin | ||||||||
• | 420-421 | Li Xun | ||||||||
History | ||||||||||
• | Established | 400 | ||||||||
• | Fall of Jiuquan | 420 | ||||||||
• | Disestablished | 421 | ||||||||
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The Western Liang (traditional Chinese: 西涼; simplified Chinese: 西凉; pinyin: Xī Liáng; 400-421) was a state of the Sixteen Kingdoms in China, one of the "Five Liang" (Wu Liang) of this era. Western Liang was founded by the Li family of the Han Chinese. The founder of the Tang Dynasty, Li Yuan (Emperor Gaozu), traced his patrilineal ancestry to the Western Liang rulers, and traced the ancestry of the Western Liang rulers to Li Guang and Laozi in the paternal line. The Li family of Western Liang were known as the Longxi Li lineage ().
All rulers of the Western Liang proclaimed themselves "wang".
Jianchu (建初 Jiànchū) 406-417