Xiahou Hui 夏侯徽 | |||||||||
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Born | 211 | ||||||||
Died | 234 (aged 23) | ||||||||
Spouse | Sima Shi | ||||||||
Issue Detail | five daughters | ||||||||
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House | House of Sima | ||||||||
Father | Xiahou Shang | ||||||||
Mother | Lady Cao |
Xiahou Hui (211 – May or June 234?[1]), courtesy name Yuanrong, formally known as Empress Jinghuai, was a noble lady of the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period of China. She was a clever adviser to Sima Shi; it is said that she was poisoned by her husband due to conflicting loyalties.
Life
Xiahou Hui was a daughter of Xiahou Shang, a military general of the Cao Wei state in the Three Kingdoms period. Her mother was the Lady of Deyang District (德陽鄉主), a sister of the Wei general Cao Zhen; her full brother was Xiahou Xuan. At some point,[2] she married Sima Shi, who would eventually become the regent of the Cao Wei state from 251 to 255. She bore Sima Shi five daughters but no sons. She was an elegant and intelligent woman who helped Sima Shi with his scholarship and his strategies. However, she eventually realised that her husband was not loyal to Wei; Sima Shi too became wary of her, due to her familial ties with the royal Cao clan of Wei. In 234, Xiahou Hui died after being poisoned.[3][4]
After the Jin dynasty replaced the Cao Wei state, the first Jin ruler Sima Yan (Emperor Wu), a nephew of Sima Shi, honoured Xiahou Hui with the posthumous title "Empress Jinghuai" to match Sima Shi's posthumous title of "Emperor Jing".
See also
References
- ↑ Sanguozhi and Zizhi Tongjian both recorded that there was an epidemic in the 4th month of the 2nd year of the Qing'long era of Cao Rui's reign. This corresponds to 16 May to 14 Jun 234 in the Julian calendar. As the anecdote of Lady Xiahou being poisoned to death can be considered doubtful, it is probably more likely that Lady Xiahou died during this epidemic.
- ↑ It is unknown if the marriage took place during Cao Pi's or Cao Rui's reign.
- ↑ (后知帝非魏之纯臣,而后既魏氏之甥,帝深忌之。青龙二年,遂以鸩崩,...) Jin Shu, vol.31
- ↑ In his Zizhi Tongjian Kaoyi (资治通鉴考异), Sima Guang expressed his skepticism of this account. He argued that at this point, Sima Yi had just earned Cao Rui's trust, and showed no signs of disloyalty; his sons had no reasons to be disloyal as well. Thus, he didn't include this account in Zizhi Tongjian. (是时司马懿方信任于明帝,未有不臣之迹,况其诸子乎!徒以魏甥之故猥鸩其妻,俱非事实,盖甚之之辞,不然师自以他故鸠之也,今不取。) Zizhi Tongjian Kaoyi, vol.03
- Fang, Xuanling (ed.) (648). Book of Jin (Jin Shu).