Emperor Hui of Han China
Format of naming convention in English is under discussion at .
Emperor Hui of Han China, ch 漢惠帝, py. hÃÂàn hÃÂùi dÃÂì, wg. Han Hui-ti, (210 BC - 188 BC) was the second emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty.
| Family name | Liu (劉 liÃÂú) in Chinese |
| Given name | Ying (盈 yÃÂÃÂng) in Chinese |
| Era name | none |
| Father | Emperor Gao of Han China (eldest son of) |
| Mother | Empress Dowager LÃÂü |
| Wife | Empress Chang |
| Children | at least 1 daughter who was murdered by Empress Dowager LÃÂü |
| Duration of reign | 195 BC-188 BC |
| Tomb | |
| Temple name | |
| Courtesy name | Posthumous name | 孝惠 (py. xiÃÂào hÃÂùi), literary meaning: "filial and benevolent" |
| Posthumous name in short | 惠 (py. hÃÂùi), literary meaning: "benevolent" |
He was remembered as a weak character dominated by his mother, Empress Dowager LÃÂü. She installed his two puppet infants, Shaodi Kong and Shaodi Hong, the sons of Hui's concubine after Hui died without a designated heir.
Biography
See also
Preceded by:
Emperor Gao of Han ChinaWestern Han Dynasty
Succeeded by:
Empress Dowager LÃÂü