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  2. Consort Zhou (Cheng) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consort_Zhou_(Cheng)

    Consort Zhou (周貴人, personal name unknown) (died 16 April 363 [1]) was a Chinese imperial consort during the Jin Dynasty (266–420). She was a concubine of Emperor Cheng . [ 2 ] She was favored by him, and they had two sons – Sima Pi (later Emperor Ai ) and Sima Yi (later Emperor Fei ).

  3. Imperial Chinese harem system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Chinese_harem_system

    There were limits placed on how many imperial consorts could hold the ranks of concubine and above. An emperor could have 1 empress, 1 imperial noble consort, 2 noble consorts, 4 consorts and 6 concubines at a time. The ranks of noble lady, first class attendant and second class attendant were unlimited.

  4. Chinese nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_nobility

    The social system of the Zhou dynasty is sometimes referred to as the Chinese feudalism and was the combination of fengjian (enfeoffment and establishment) and zongfa (clan law). Male subjects were classified into, in descending order of rank: the landed nobles – Zhuhou (諸侯 pinyin zhū hóu),

  5. List of Chinese empresses and queens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_empresses...

    The following is a list of empresses and queens consort of China. China has periodically been divided into kingdoms as well as united under empires, resulting in consorts titled both queen and empress. The empress title could also be given posthumously.

  6. Zhou dynasty nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhou_dynasty_nobility

    The Zhou dynasty grew out of a predynastic polity with its own existing power structure, primarily organized as a set of culturally affiliated kinship groups. The defining characteristics of a noble were their ancestral temple surname (姓; xíng), their lineage line within that ancestral surname, and seniority within that lineage line.

  7. Battle of Xuge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Xuge

    The Battle of Xuge (Chinese: 繻葛之战) took place in 707 BC, when the Zhou dynasty invaded its vassal the neighboring State of Zheng. [1] The defeat of the Zhou forces, representing the Son of Heaven, destroyed any residual prestige that the Zhou court had since establishing itself in Luoyang, and allowed for the rise of the feudal states that would characterise the Spring and Autumn period.

  8. Empress Zhou (Ming dynasty) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Zhou_(Ming_dynasty)

    The following day, the rebel army attacked the capital. The Chongzhen Emperor ordered the crown prince and his two brothers to hide in the home of relatives, and summoned the rest of his family. Rather than let them be captured by the rebels, the emperor started killing the female members of his family, concubines and consorts.

  9. Guo Wei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guo_Wei

    Guo Wei (Chinese: 郭威) (10 September 904 [3] – 22 February 954 [4]), also known by his temple name as the Emperor Taizu of Later Zhou (後周太祖), was the founding emperor of the Chinese Later Zhou dynasty during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, reigning from 951 until his death in 954.