Chiyu (Cieu) Ai-vyong ( Vietnamese. Tri Au Ai Vương , wh. 趙 哀王 , pall .: Zhao Ai-wang ) is the fourth ruler of Nam of the Vietnamese dynasty, whose reign was from 113 to 112 BC. er [1] [2] . Birth name - Hung ( Vietnamese Hưng , Chinese 興 , pall .: Sin ) [1] [2] .
| Whose Ay-vyong (Zhao Ai-wang) | |
|---|---|
| vietnam Triệu Ai Vương , whale. 趙 哀王 | |
| Birth | |
| Death | |
| Father | |
| Mother | |
Life Story
Chewu Hung is the second son of Chew Minh-vyong and Ku Thi ( Cù Thị , 樛 ) . In 135 BC. er his father was sent to the court for service in the imperial guard, and before leaving he married a Yue woman who bore him the eldest son, Kyu Chien Dyk . In Chang'an, Min-vyong married Ku Thi (Kit. Jiushi), she bore him Chew Hyung.
After Min-vyong ascended to the throne of Namvieta, he appointed the second son to be the heir, despite the accepted principle of the birthright . When Minh-vyong died, Khung became the ruler under the name Ai-vyong, and his mother became the widow empress [3] .
In 113 BC. er Wu di sent Ango Shaoji ( Chinese trad. 安 國 少 季 , ex. 安 国 少 季 , pinyin : ānguó shàojì ) to Namweet to take Ai-vyong and the empress with him, and rumor had it that There were premarital ties with the Ango.
Officer Liu Jia ( Chinese trad. 呂嘉 , Ex . , Pinyin : lǚ jiā , Vietnam. Lữ Gia , Ly Zia), at that time was an influential military, overshadowing the glory of the empress. According to Shi Ji and the General Assembly of Daiviet's historical notes , Liu Jia was a Lakwiet leader, and more than 70 people from his tribe served at the court and in Namvetie. Fearing for her power, the empress decided to completely submit to Han, while at the same time quarreling with Liu and other high-ranking officials. When news of this reached Wudi, he sent two thousand soldiers to arrest Liu Jia [3] . Liu Jia launched a coup d'état, killed Ai-vyong and his mother, along with all Han emissaries in the capital [3] . After that, Liu Jia crowned Chew Thuatziong-vyong and declared .
The Cheyu Khung temple name is not mentioned either in Shi Ji or in Hanshu , however, the Full Collection of Divet’s historical notes contain the name Ai-vyong ( Ai Vương , 哀王,, kit. “Ai-van”) .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Kontsevich, 2010 , p. 446.
- ↑ 1 2 Fedorin A. L. Chronological tables on the history of Vietnam with commentary // Three-quarters of a century: D. V. Deopiku - friends and students / ed. N.N. Bektimirova - Moscow : Moscow State University , 2007. - P. 114–217. - 525 s. - ISBN 978-5-88451-225-2
- ↑ 1 2 3 Book 1 // A Brief History of Vieta (Viet shy Lyok) - Moscow : Nauka , 1980. - P. 109–138. - 288 s.
Literature
- Book 1 // A brief history of Vieta (Viet shy lyok) - Moscow : Nauka , 1980. - P. 109–138. - 288 s.
- Kontsevich L.R. Chronology of the countries of East and Central Asia . - Moscow: Eastern Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2010. - 806 p. - ISBN 978-5-02-036350-2 .
- Shi Ji , vol. 113 .
- Hanshu , vol. 95
- The complete collection of Divet’s historical notes , volume 2