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{{Short description|Chinese prince}}
{{Short description|Chinese prince}}
'''Liu Piguang''' ({{zh|t=劉辟光|s=刘辟光}}; died 154 BC) was the ninth son of [[Liu Fei, Prince of Qi|Liu Fei]] and grandson of [[Emperor Gaozu of Han]]. When Liu Ze, Prince of Qi, died without an heir in 165 BC, [[Emperor Wen of Han]] divided the Qi territory in the land among the living sons of Liu Fei. In 164, Piguang was named Prince of Jinan and received part of the former Qi land.<ref name=Grand52>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/史記/卷052|last=Sima Qian|authorlink=Sima Qian|title=Records of the Grand Historian|chapter=齊悼惠王世家|trans-chapter=House of Prince Daohui of Qi|volume=52|language=Chinese|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref> In 154 BC, he joined the [[Rebellion of the Seven States]] initiated by [[Liu Pi (prince)|Liu Pi]], Prince of Wu.<ref name=Han35>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/漢書/卷035|language=Chinese|title=Book of Han|last=Ban Biao|authorlink=Ban Biao|last2=Ban Gu|authorlink2=Ban Gu|last3=Ban Zhao|authorlink3=Ban Zhao|chapter=荊燕吳傳|trans-chapter=Biographies of the Princes of Jing, Yan and Wu|volume=35|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref> Piguang was defeated and killed in battle with generals [[Dou Ying]] and [[Zhou Yafu]]. His land was returned to Han and his title was abolished.<ref name=Grand52 /><ref name=Han15>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/zh/%E6%BC%A2%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B7015|language=Chinese|title=Book of Han|last=Ban Biao|authorlink=Ban Biao|last2=Ban Gu|authorlink2=Ban Gu|last3=Ban Zhao|authorlink3=Ban Zhao|chapter=王子侯表|trans-chapter=Table of sons of nobles|volume=15|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref>
'''Liu Piguang''' ({{zh|t=劉辟光|s=刘辟光}}; died 154 BC) was the ninth son of [[Liu Fei, Prince of Qi|Liu Fei]] and grandson of [[Emperor Gaozu of Han]]. When Liu Ze, Prince of Qi, died without an heir in 165 BC, [[Emperor Wen of Han]] divided the Qi territory in the land among the living sons of Liu Fei. In 164, Piguang was named Prince of Jinan and received part of the former Qi land.<ref name=Grand52>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/史記/卷052|last=Sima Qian|authorlink=Sima Qian|title=Records of the Grand Historian|chapter=齊悼惠王世家|trans-chapter=House of Prince Daohui of Qi|volume=52|language=Chinese|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref> In 154 BC, he joined the [[Rebellion of the Seven States]] initiated by [[Liu Pi (prince)|Liu Pi]], Prince of Wu.<ref name=Han35>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/漢書/卷035|language=Chinese|title=Book of Han|last=Ban Biao|authorlink=Ban Biao|last2=Ban Gu|authorlink2=Ban Gu|last3=Ban Zhao|authorlink3=Ban Zhao|chapter=荊燕吳傳|trans-chapter=Biographies of the Princes of Jing, Yan and Wu|volume=35|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref> Piguang was defeated and killed in battle with generals Dou Ying and [[Zhou Yafu]]. His land was returned to Han and his title was abolished.<ref name=Grand52 /><ref name=Han15>{{cite book|url=http://zh.wikisource.org/zh/%E6%BC%A2%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B7015|language=Chinese|title=Book of Han|last=Ban Biao|authorlink=Ban Biao|last2=Ban Gu|authorlink2=Ban Gu|last3=Ban Zhao|authorlink3=Ban Zhao|chapter=王子侯表|trans-chapter=Table of sons of nobles|volume=15|accessdate=15 July 2011}}</ref>


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 22:25, 23 May 2024

Liu Piguang (simplified Chinese: 刘辟光; traditional Chinese: 劉辟光; died 154 BC) was the ninth son of Liu Fei and grandson of Emperor Gaozu of Han. When Liu Ze, Prince of Qi, died without an heir in 165 BC, Emperor Wen of Han divided the Qi territory in the land among the living sons of Liu Fei. In 164, Piguang was named Prince of Jinan and received part of the former Qi land.[1] In 154 BC, he joined the Rebellion of the Seven States initiated by Liu Pi, Prince of Wu.[2] Piguang was defeated and killed in battle with generals Dou Ying and Zhou Yafu. His land was returned to Han and his title was abolished.[1][3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Sima Qian. "齊悼惠王世家" [House of Prince Daohui of Qi]. Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). Vol. 52. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  2. ^ Ban Biao; Ban Gu; Ban Zhao. "荊燕吳傳" [Biographies of the Princes of Jing, Yan and Wu]. Book of Han (in Chinese). Vol. 35. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  3. ^ Ban Biao; Ban Gu; Ban Zhao. "王子侯表" [Table of sons of nobles]. Book of Han (in Chinese). Vol. 15. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
Prince of Jinan
 Died: 154 BC
Chinese royalty
New creation Prince of Jinan
164 BC – 154 BC
Vacant
Title next held by
Liu Kang