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Empress Zhang (Hongxi)
View on WikipediaEmpress Chengxiaozhao (誠孝昭皇后; 1379 – 20 November 1442), of the Zhang clan, was a Chinese empress consort of the Ming dynasty, married to the fourth Ming ruler, the Hongxi Emperor (Zhu Gaochi 1378–1425). He only ruled for one year, so she then served as Empress dowager after the accession of her son the Xuande Emperor. She later served as the Regent of China during the minority of the reign of her grandson, Emperor Yingzong of Ming, from 1435 until 1442.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Zhang was from Northern Shanxi, a peasant background, the daughter of Zhang Qi (張麒) and Lady Tong (仝氏).[1] She had two brothers, Zang Chang (1374–1428), who was a distinguished General, and Zang Sheng (1379–1444), who rose to the rank of commander-in-chief (dudu tongzhi). Both brothers were enfeoffed as earls.[2]
She became the first spouse of the future Hongxi Emperor in 1395[2] or 1396.[3] On her marriage, her father was posthumously enfeoffed as Marquis of Pengcheng (彭城侯).[3] She gave birth to her eldest son, Zhu Zhanji in 1399. He became the favourite of his grandfather, who appointed him imperial grandson-heir (Huang Taisun) in 1411.[2] In 1405, she gave birth to her second son, Zhu Zhanyong, followed by Zhu Zhanshan in 1406, and a daughter, Princess Jiaxing in 1409.
In 1404, her spouse was made heir apparent and Zhang was elevated to crown princess (Chinese: 皇太子妃; pinyin: Huáng Tàizǐfēi).[2] His father, however, was not convinced that he was the right choice for heir apparent, and tried several attempts to appoint someone else. Court officials resisted these attempts. Zhang, a respectful and filial as well as a good manager played a part in his retaining the position as the heir apparent.[4]
Empress
[edit]On 7 September 1424, her spouse ascended the throne as the Hongxi Emperor, and on 29 October, she was made empress (Chinese: 張皇后; pinyin: Zhāng Húanghòu). She was described as wise, good and capable, with a great knowledge of all events both inside and outside of the palace, and was held in good confidence of the emperor, who allowed her to participate in state affairs.[5]
In 1425, her son succeeded to the throne as the Xuande Emperor. He granted his mother the title of Empress dowager (Chinese: 張皇太后; pinyin: Zhāng Húang tàihòu). She was a dominant presence during the reign of her son, and accompanied him on his trips around the empire.[5][6]
Regency
[edit]In 1435, Zhang's son was succeeded by her eight-year-old grandson, Emperor Yingzong of Ming, and she was granted the title Grand empress dowager (Chinese: 太皇太后; pinyin: Tàihuáng tàihòu). There was no precedent on how to handle the occurrence of a child emperor in the Ming dynasty. The emperor had instructed his ministers to guide his son and take advice from Zhang.[7] To prevent any succession dispute, Zhang appeared before the ministers and presented her grandson as the new emperor.[8]
A regency was formed consisting of Zhang Fu (Duke of Yingguo), as well as three grand secretaries: Yang Shiqi, Yang Rong and Yang Pu, with Empress Zhang as the head of the regency council and regent.[5] It was she who appointed the five ministers of the minor government.[9] She was never formally given the title of regent: when she was asked to, she responded that there was no ancestral precedence for such a thing in the dynasty.[5] Though she refused the title, she still acted as regent, and held council with her ministers, listened to their views, and reserved the final say to her.[5]
Well known was her conflict with the child emperor's influential favorite, Wang Zhen, a eunuch, whom she regarded as too influential and in danger of becoming one of the infamous de facto ruler-eunuchs of the past.[10] She summoned the ministers and a group of female officials, armed them, called upon Wang Zhen and sentenced him to death on the spot, and ordered the ministers and female officials to kill him immediately.[10] When the emperor and ministers begged her to pardon Wang Zhen, she did so and warned the latter not to err again.[10]
She kept her position as regent of China until her death in 1442. She was called a "Yao and Shun among women".[10]
Titles
[edit]- During the reign of the Hongwu Emperor (r. 1368–1398):
- Lady Zhang (張氏; from 1379)
- Hereditary Princess of Yan (燕世子妃; from 1395/1396)
- During the reign of the Yongle Emperor (r. 1402–1424):
- Crown Princess (皇太子妃; from 1404)
- During the reign of the Hongxi Emperor (r. 1424–1425):
- Empress (皇后; from 29 October 1424)
- During the reign of the Xuande Emperor (r. 1425–1435):
- Empress dowager (皇太后; from 27 June 1425)
- During the reign of the Zhengtong Emperor (r. 1435–1449)
- Grand empress dowager (太皇太后; from 7 February 1435)
- Empress Chéngxiào Gōngsù Míngdé Hóngrén Shùntiān Zhāoshèng Zhāo (誠孝恭肅明德弘仁順天昭聖昭皇后; from 1442)
Issue
[edit]- As Hereditary Princess:
- Zhu Zhanji, the Xuande Emperor (宣宗 朱瞻基; 16 March 1399 – 31 January 1435), the Hongxi Emperor's first son
- As Crown Princess:
- Zhu Zhanyong, Prince Jing of Yue (越靖王 朱瞻墉; 9 February 1405 – 5 August 1439), the Hongxi Emperor's third son
- Zhu Zhanshan, Prince Xian of Xiang (襄憲王 朱瞻墡; 4 April 1406 – 18 February 1478), the Hongxi Emperor's fifth son
- Princess Jiaxing (嘉興公主; 1409 – 9 March 1439), the Hongxi Emperor's first daughter
Popular culture
[edit]Empress Zhang was played by Wu Yue in the 2019 series Ming Dynasty.
Portrayed by Liu Min in the 2022 Chinese television series Royal Feast.
Ancestry
[edit]| Zhang Congyi | |||||||||||
| Zhang Qi | |||||||||||
| Lady Zhou | |||||||||||
| Empress Chengxiaozhao (1379–1442) | |||||||||||
| Tong Shan | |||||||||||
| Lady Tong | |||||||||||
References
[edit]- ^ McMahon 2016, p. 89.
- ^ a b c d Lin 2014, p. 580.
- ^ a b Zhang 1739.
- ^ Lin 2014, p. 580-81.
- ^ a b c d e Lin 2014, p. 581.
- ^ McMahon 2016, p. 90.
- ^ McMahon 2016, p. 92.
- ^ McMahon 2016, p. 93.
- ^ McMahon 2016, p. 94.
- ^ a b c d McMahon 2016, p. 94-95.
Sources
[edit]- Lin, Yanqing (2014). "Zhang, Empress of the Hongxi Emperor, Renzong, of Ming". In Lee, Lily Xiao Hong; Wiles, Sue (eds.). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, Volume II: Tang Through Ming 618 - 1644. New York: M. E. Sharpe. pp. 580–581. ISBN 9780765643162.
- Zhang, Tingyu, ed. (1739). "《明史》列传第一 后妃" [History of Ming, Historical Biography 1, Wives and Consorts]. Ctext (in Chinese). Retrieved 21 April 2017.
- McMahon, Keith (2016). Celestial Women: Imperial Wives and Concubines in China from Song to Qing. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 9781442255029.
Further reading
[edit]- Denis C.; GRIMM, Tilemann. The Cheng-t'ung, Ching-t'ai, and T'ien-shun reigns, 1436–1464. In MOTE, Frederick W; TWITCHETT, Denis C. The Cambridge History of China Volume 7: The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part 1. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1988. [dále jen Twitchett, Grimm]. ISBN 0521243327.
- DREYER, Edward L. Early Ming China: A Political History. Stanford : Stanford University Press, 1982. 315 s. ISBN 0-8047-1105-4. S. 223. (anglicky) [Dále jen Dreyer].
- EER, Ph. de. The Care-taker Emperor : Aspects of the Imperial Institution in Fifteenth-century China as Reflected in the Political History of the Reign of Chu Chʾi-yü. Leiden : Brill, 1986. 226 s. ISBN 9004078983, 9789004078987.
Empress Zhang (Hongxi)
View on GrokipediaEmpress Chengxiaozhao (1379–1442), of the Zhang clan, was the empress consort of the Hongxi Emperor, the fourth emperor of China's Ming dynasty who reigned from 1424 to 1425.[1] Born in 1379, she married Zhu Gaochi, the future Hongxi Emperor, and gave birth to several children, most notably the succeeding Xuande Emperor, Zhu Zhanji.[2] Following her husband's untimely death after a mere ten-month reign, she assumed the role of empress dowager and exerted considerable influence over the young Xuande Emperor's administration, advising on state matters from behind the scenes and helping to stabilize the court during a transitional period.[3] Renowned for her intelligence, political insight, and restraint in exercising power—opting for indirect governance rather than overt regency—she contributed to the consolidation of imperial authority in the early Ming, as evidenced by her patronage of cultural artifacts and recorded poetic compositions.[2] Her tenure as dowager marked one of the few instances in Ming history where an empress mother played a pivotal yet unobtrusive role in governance, prioritizing filial piety and Confucian principles over personal ambition.[1]
Early Life and Background
Origins and Family
Empress Zhang was born in 1379 in Yongcheng, Henan province, into a family of modest socioeconomic standing within Ming officialdom. Her father, Zhang Qi, held the rank of deputy military commander (兵马副指挥), a low-level position that placed the household in the lower echelons of the bureaucracy rather than among the aristocracy or wealthy landowners.[4] Her mother was Lady Tong (仝夫人), with scant additional details preserved in historical records about her immediate family dynamics or early upbringing. This humble origin distinguished Empress Zhang from many imperial consorts drawn from elite scholarly or noble lineages, aligning with the Yongle Emperor's (r. 1402–1424) meritocratic preferences in selections for the Yan princely household, where beauty, virtue, and suitability were prioritized over pedigree as evidenced in Ming archival selections.[5] Verifiable accounts of siblings are limited, though later familial promotions suggest some brothers attained military prominence, indicative of opportunistic advancement tied to her eventual status rather than pre-existing wealth or influence.[6]Selection and Education
Zhang, born in 1379 to a peasant family in northern Shanxi province, originated from humble circumstances without notable aristocratic ties. Her father, Zhang Qi, and mother, Lady Tong, provided a background typical of rural commoners during the early Ming era.[7] Despite this, she was selected in 1387, during the 20th year of the Hongwu Emperor's reign, as the principal consort for Zhu Gaochi, the heir apparent to the Prince of Yan (Zhu Di). This choice reflected the Ming practice of evaluating potential consorts through assessments emphasizing physical health, moral character, and compatibility with Confucian ideals of virtue and obedience, rather than relying solely on family prestige.[8] The selection process for princely consorts like Zhang involved palace examinations where candidates, often young girls from various social strata, were scrutinized for qualities such as diligence, modesty, and basic literacy to ensure they could support the heir's household in accordance with imperial standards. Historical records highlight Zhang's early demonstration of frugality and moral rectitude, traits aligned with Confucian teachings on restraint and familial harmony, which likely elevated her candidacy amid competition from other prospects. Her personal diligence in cultivating these virtues—without the advantages of elite tutoring—distinguished her, as evidenced by later encomiums portraying her as exemplifying sage-like conduct akin to legendary rulers Yao and Shun in female form.[9] Post-selection, Zhang received formalized education in the Yan princely establishment, focusing on Confucian classics, household management, and ethical conduct to prepare for her role. This training underscored causal factors in her trajectory: innate or self-developed abilities in literacy and ethical reasoning enabled her to transcend her origins, fostering the competence that imperial evaluators prized for long-term stability in princely and eventual imperial lineages. Such preparation emphasized practical virtues over ornamental skills, setting a foundation for her influence independent of birth privilege.[5]Marriage and Consortship
Betrothal and Marriage to Zhu Gaochi
Empress Zhang, born in 1379 in Yongcheng County, Henan Province, to a modest family, was selected through imperial processes for betrothal to Zhu Gaochi, the eldest son of Zhu Di (then Prince of Yan), in the mid-1390s during the waning years of the Hongwu Emperor's reign. This arranged union exemplified Ming dynasty practices for allying princely houses with loyal or meritorious families, with her father subsequently elevated to nobility as a reward for the match. The betrothal adhered to Confucian protocols, involving preliminary inquiries into compatibility, astrological consultations, and formal exchanges to ensure auspiciousness and state sanction.[5] The marriage was consummated in 1395, when Zhang entered the Yan princely establishment in Beiping, following the six rites of traditional Chinese weddings adapted for imperial kin: proposal, name exchange, betrothal gifts, dowry presentation, bride fetching, and ceremonial prostrations before ancestors and the prince. These rituals, overseen by court officials, emphasized hierarchical order, filial piety, and the consolidation of dynastic loyalty, with no recorded deviations for the Yan household. Zhu Gaochi, aged about 17 and already displaying scholarly temperament over martial prowess—contrasting his father's preferences—benefited from Zhang's composed demeanor, as she assumed duties in household management early on.[5][10] Contemporary records portray Zhu Gaochi as compassionate yet physically unassuming, prone to health issues like later gout that limited mobility, fostering reliance on Zhang's advisory input for domestic harmony. She promoted thrift and order within the princely residence, mitigating tensions from Zhu Di's favoritism toward his second son and helping Zhu Gaochi navigate paternal expectations without overt conflict. This nascent partnership laid groundwork for her enduring influence, evidenced in princely annals noting her role in reconciling family dynamics amid the Yan commandery's preparations for greater responsibilities.[5][6]Life as Princess Consort of Yan
Zhang shi was selected as the consort to Zhu Gaochi, heir apparent of the Prince of Yan, in Hongwu 26 (1393), due to her reputed virtue, and resided in the Yan principality's mansion in Beiping (modern Beijing). Zhu Gaochi demonstrated exclusive favoritism toward her, taking no other consorts during this period. During the Jingnan Campaign (1399–1402), as Zhu Di marched southward to challenge the Jianwen Emperor, Zhu Gaochi remained in Beiping to defend the north, commanding over 100,000 troops against Jianwen forces besieging the city and suffering several defeats until Zhu Di's arrival turned the tide. Zhang shi managed internal household affairs amid these tensions, maintaining order in the Yan establishment while her husband focused on military defense. She exemplified diligence and frugality in household administration, prioritizing resource conservation during the uncertainties of Zhu Di's campaigns. Zhang shi also personally oversaw the Confucian education of her children, instilling rites and moral principles to prepare them for potential imperial roles. In navigating princely intrigues, Zhang shi frequently remonstrated against Zhu Di's repeated inclinations to depose Zhu Gaochi in favor of his second son, Zhu Gaoxu, though her劝谏 did not ultimately sway Zhu Di's preferences; her steadfast family loyalty and the demonstrated capabilities of her lineage preserved the heir's position.Ascension to Empress
Becoming Empress Consort
Following the death of the Yongle Emperor on July 12, 1424, Zhu Gaochi ascended the throne as the Hongxi Emperor on September 7, 1424, thereby elevating his principal consort, Zhang shi, to the status of empress.[5] This transition marked the formal recognition of her position at the apex of the imperial harem, consistent with Ming dynastic precedent where the emperor's primary wife assumed the empress title upon his enthronement.[11] On October 29, 1424, Zhang was officially installed as Empress Chengxiaozhao via imperial edict, a ceremony that solidified her ceremonial and administrative authority within the inner palace.[5] The enfeoffment process, drawn from the Ming Veritable Records, emphasized her role in upholding Confucian hierarchies and ritual propriety during the Hongxi Emperor's brief reign, which lasted until his death on May 29, 1425.[5] As empress, Zhang immediately adopted responsibilities centered on palace management and ritual observance, including oversight of the six inner court services and participation in ancestral worship and imperial ceremonies, extending the managerial continuity from her prior role as consort in the Yan commandery.[11] [12] These duties reinforced the empress's position as the symbolic mother of the realm, focused on domestic harmony rather than direct political intervention.[11]Role During Hongxi Emperor's Reign
Empress Zhang was formally installed as empress on October 29, 1424, during the nine-month reign of the Hongxi Emperor, which began on September 7, 1424, and ended with his death on May 29, 1425.[5] In this period, she fulfilled the duties of empress consort, managing inner palace affairs amid the emperor's administration of reforms aimed at alleviating the economic burdens from the preceding Yongle reign.[13] The Hongxi Emperor prioritized Confucian ideals, issuing edicts for collective deliberation among officials, rehabilitating disgraced Confucian scholars, and suspending extravagant projects such as further treasure fleet voyages planned under Yongle.[14] These measures emphasized meritocracy in bureaucratic appointments and fiscal restraint, marking a shift toward domestic stability and ethical governance.[15] Given the emperor's longstanding health complications, including severe obesity that impaired mobility, Empress Zhang's role extended to facilitating orderly preparations for succession, ensuring the continuity of imperial authority to their eldest son, Zhu Zhanji.[5] Her reputed wisdom underpinned these stabilizing efforts during the transitional phase.[14]Political Influence and Regency
Influence Under Xuande Emperor
As Empress Dowager following the Hongxi Emperor's death on 29 May 1425, Zhang exercised behind-the-scenes influence over her son, the Xuande Emperor (r. 1425–1435), through counsel that supported administrative stability amid the young ruler's efforts to consolidate power. Her guidance contributed to a decade of relative peace and prosperity, marked by economic recovery and reduced military campaigns compared to the preceding Yongle era, as she advised on balancing imperial authority with bureaucratic oversight.[16] Zhang approached court affairs with prudence, restraining her natal family's high officials—such as her father and brothers—from overreaching, thereby preempting accusations of nepotism and preserving dynastic legitimacy during the transition to her son's rule. This restraint extended to fiscal restraint, aligning with broader Ming efforts to curb post-Yongle expenditures, though specific vetoes of extravagance remain unattested in primary annals beyond general dowager oversight. Her role in moderating family alliances helped avert princely challenges, fostering the smooth handover to the next generation in 1435 without overt factional strife.[17]Regency for Emperor Yingzong
Following the death of her son, the Xuande Emperor, on 31 January 1435, Grand Empress Dowager Zhang assumed the regency over the Ming court on behalf of her grandson, Emperor Yingzong, who ascended the throne at the age of eight sui.[18] In accordance with the late emperor's directives, she directed state affairs through a council dominated by experienced Hanlin scholars and grand secretaries, notably the trio known as the "Three Yangs"—Yang Shiqi, Yang Rong, and Yang Pu—who managed administrative and policy decisions.[18][15] This regency structure effectively stabilized court factions by leveraging the ministers' long-standing bureaucratic expertise, thereby limiting the immediate ascent of eunuch influence, including that of the young emperor's attendant Wang Zhen, whom she kept under restraint.[18][3] Grand Empress Dowager Zhang personally oversaw Emperor Yingzong's education in Confucian classics and governance principles, ensuring his preparation for rule while she presided over audiences and deliberations from behind a screen, a practice rooted in Ming precedents for dowager regencies.[15] The regency persisted until 1442, during which period the court addressed internal challenges such as localized rebellions, including uprisings in Fujian led by figures like Deng Maoqi, through coordinated ministerial responses rather than unilateral imperial action.[18] Her administration emphasized continuity with the Xuande era's policies, fostering a period of relative administrative order amid the emperor's minority.[3]Key Policies and Administrative Reforms
During her regency for the young Emperor Yingzong from 1435 to 1442, Grand Empress Dowager Zhang nominally oversaw the court while delegating substantial authority to a trio of senior civil officials known as the "Three Yangs"—Yang Shiqi, Yang Rong, and Yang Pu—who had risen through the Hanlin Academy and embodied Confucian scholarly governance. These ministers prioritized administrative efficiency, bureaucratic integrity, and restraint in policy-making, fostering a period of relative domestic stability in the early Zhengtong era by emphasizing civil administration over expansionist ventures. Their approach curbed excessive military engagements, limiting campaigns to defensive measures against Mongol incursions rather than proactive offensives, which helped preserve fiscal resources and avert the overextension seen in prior reigns like Yongle's northern expeditions.[18] Zhang actively restrained the growing influence of eunuchs, particularly Wang Zhen, the Director of Ceremonial, who had begun accumulating power through proximity to the emperor; historical accounts note that Wang moderated his ambitions under her oversight, delaying the unchecked eunuch interference that escalated after her death in 1442. This containment supported the Three Yangs' promotion of scholar-officials, reinforcing merit-based appointments via the examination system and sidelining factional or militaristic elements within the bureaucracy. Such policies contributed to causal stability by aligning imperial rule with orthodox Confucian ideals, reducing court intrigue, and enabling effective responses to natural disasters through targeted tax remissions in affected regions.[19][18] Criticisms in later historiography, including the Ming Shi, highlight potential over-centralization under the regency's elder-statesmen model, which may have stifled innovation and allowed latent eunuch networks to persist unchecked, foreshadowing the Tumu Crisis of 1449. Nonetheless, empirical outcomes—such as quelled peasant unrest in provinces like Fujian through administrative corrections rather than suppression—underscore achievements in averting immediate crises, with no major fiscal collapse or widespread rebellion during the period. Attributions of direct frugality measures, like palace staff reductions, lack specific fiscal records tied to her tenure, though the court's conservative fiscal stance under the Three Yangs implicitly aligned with broader Ming efforts to limit extravagance post-Yongle.[18]Family and Descendants
Children and Immediate Family
Empress Zhang bore four children with Zhu Gaochi, the future Hongxi Emperor: the eldest son Zhu Zhanji (born 16 March 1399), who later ascended as the Xuande Emperor; the third son overall Zhu Zhanyong (born 9 February 1405), enfeoffed as Prince Jing of Yue (d. 1439); the fifth son Zhu Zhanshan (born 1406), enfeoffed as Prince Xian of Xiang (d. 1478); and the first daughter, Princess Jiaxing (born 1409, d. 1439), who married Jing Yuan in 1428.[20][21][22] Zhu Gaochi fathered additional offspring with concubines, resulting in a total of ten sons and seven daughters, of whom only nine sons and four daughters reached adulthood. This pattern of high early mortality among imperial siblings—evident in the unnumbered second and fourth sons dying young—highlighted the precarious survival rates in Ming princely households, where infant and child death was common due to disease, limited medical interventions, and the demands of dynastic heir production to secure succession lines amid political intrigue.[5][22]| Child | Birth Year | Title/Role | Death Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhu Zhanji | 1399 | Xuande Emperor | 1435 | Eldest son; succeeded father |
| Zhu Zhanyong | 1405 | Prince Jing of Yue | 1439 | Third son overall |
| Zhu Zhanshan | 1406 | Prince Xian of Xiang | 1478 | Fifth son overall |
| Princess Jiaxing | 1409 | First daughter | 1439 | Married Jing Yuan (d. 1449) |