97:) of Zhaoyi Circuit in 786, he sent gold and silk to Weibo Circuit, requesting that he be allowed to have Wu Shaoyang. Weibo allowed Wu Shaoyang to report to Zhangyi. Wu Shaocheng claimed that Wu Shaoyang was a cousin and gave him various commissions; Wu Shaoyang was also given access to Wu Shaocheng's mansion. Still, because Wu Shaocheng was cruel and suspicious, Wu Shaoyang requested a position not at headquarters, and Wu Shaocheng made him the prefect of Shen Prefecture (申州, in modern
167:
initially did not announce his death and tried to obtain imperial sanction to succeed him. When
Emperor Xianzong refused to grant him a commission, Wu Yuanji reacted by pillaging the surrounding circuits, and Emperor Xianzong declared a general campaign against him, eventually defeating and killing
160:), which were known for growing tea, to rob the tea merchants. He also often accepted those persons who were under prosecution by other circuits and put them into his army. However, as he often submitted tributes of horses to Emperor Xianzong, Emperor Xianzong did not act against him.
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the Prince of Sui the titular military governor of Zhaoyi and gave Wu
Shaoyang the title of acting military governor in spring 810. In spring 811, Wu was made military governor.
105:). It was said that because Wu Shaoyang was lenient, he became favored by the army. When Wu Shaocheng grew ill in 809 and fell unconscious, his servant Xianyu Xiong'er (
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148:
It was said that during the years he was military governor, Wu
Shaoyang did not pay homage to the emperor. As his territory had many plains and meadows, he cultivated
117:) to death and took over the circuit. After Wu Shaocheng died around the new year 810, Wu Shaoyang claimed the title of acting military governor. As then-reigning
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111:), forged an order in Wu Shaocheng's name recalling Wu Shaoyang to serve as deputy military governor. Wu Shaoyang put Wu Shaocheng's son Wu Yuanqing (
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It is not known when Wu
Shaoyang was born, but it is known that his family was from Cang Prefecture (滄州/沧州, in modern
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of horses and mules. He often pillaged the hills of neighboring Shou
Prefecture (壽州/寿州, in modern
76:), and both his father and he served in the army of Weibo Circuit (魏博, headquartered in modern
133:), at the time, he felt that he could not act against Wu Shaoyang as well, so he made his son
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appeared to imply an intimate relationship, but do not explicitly state so. See
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35:) (died September 29, 814) was a Chinese military general and politician of the
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independent manner from the imperial government until his death in 814.
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was already waging a campaign against another warlord,
84:), when he became friendly with another Weibo soldier,
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Sometime after Wu
Shaocheng became military governor (
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Wu
Shaocheng's and Wu Shaoyang's biographies in the
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163:Wu Shaoyang died in 814. His son
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172:Notes and references
29:traditional Chinese
360:8th-century births
21:simplified Chinese
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40:Tang dynasty
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17:Wu Shaoyang
365:814 deaths
354:Categories
58:Background
165:Wu Yuanji
150:husbandry
108:鮮于熊兒/鲜于熊儿
44:Zhumadian
338:, vols.
328:vol. 214
316:vol. 145
300:vol. 239
281:vol. 238
241:vol. 232
223:vol. 214
215:vol. 145
143:jiedushi
94:jiedushi
64:Cangzhou
52:de facto
185:"中央研究院"
114:吳元慶/吴元庆
99:Xinyang
37:Chinese
135:Li You
78:Handan
31::
23::
168:him.
158:Anhui
154:Lu'an
131:Hebei
103:Henan
82:Hebei
68:Hebei
48:Henan
217:and
203:and
344:239
340:238
141:As
33:吳少陽
25:吴少阳
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