Jingtai (Chinese: 景泰; pinyin: Jǐngtài; Wade–Giles: Ching-t'ai; lit. 'exalted view'; 14 January 1450 – 14 February 1457) was the era name (nianhao) of the Jingtai Emperor, the seventh emperor of the Ming dynasty. It was used for a total of seven years. On 11 February 1457 (Jingtai 8, 17th day of the 1st month), Emperor Yingzong took advantage of the Jingtai Emperor's serious illness and inability to attend court, launching the "Duomen Coup" (奪門之變, "Storming of the Gates Incident") and reclaiming his imperial throne. On 15 February of the same year (21st day of the 1st month), Emperor Yingzong changed the era to Tianshun.[1][2]
Comparison table
Jingtai | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AD | 1450 | 1451 | 1452 | 1453 | 1454 | 1455 | 1456 | 1457 |
Sexagenary cycle | Gēngwǔ (庚午) | Xīnwèi (辛未) | Rénshēn (壬申) | Guǐyǒu (癸酉) | Jiǎxū (甲戌) | Yǐhài (乙亥) | Bǐngzǐ (丙子) | Dīngchǒu (丁丑) |
Other regimes' era names that existed during the same period
- China
- Vietnam
- Đại Hòa (大和) or Thái Hòa (太和) (1443–1453): Later Lê dynasty — era name of Lê Nhân Tông
- Diên Ninh (延寧, 1454–1459): Later Lê dynasty — era name of Lê Nhân Tông
- Japan
- Hōtoku (宝徳, 1449–1452): era name of Emperor Go-Hanazono
- Kyōtoku (享徳, 1452–1455): era name of Emperor Go-Hanazono
- Kōshō (康正, 1455–1457): era name of Emperor Go-Hanazono
See also
References
Bibliography
- Li Chongzhi (2004), 《中國歷代年號考》 [Zhongguo Lidai Nianhao Kao] (in Chinese), Beijing: Zhonghua Book Co., ISBN 7101025129
- Deng Hongbo (2005), 《東亞歷史年表》 [Chronology of East Asian History] (in Chinese), Taipei: National Taiwan University Program for East Asian Classics and Cultures, ISBN 9789860005189.
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