238:) to Chang'an, it was commonly speculated that Wang Zhu would next be made a chancellor. When Wang Zhu went through Baoyi on his way to Chang'an, Wang Gong initially accorded him great honor and wanted to meet him under ceremony that would make Wang Gong be like a son or nephew to him. When Wang Zhu refused, Wang Gong, in anger, killed Wang Zhu and his families and threw their bodies into the Yellow River, and then claimed to the imperial government that they had drowned when their ship capsized. The seriously weakened imperial government did not dare to investigate. By 899, it was said that Wang Gong had become so violent and paranoid that not even his wife and children could be secure that they could escape his wrath. Thereafter, he was killed in a mutiny, and the soldiers supported the officer Li Fan (
189:) — to propose an alternative, that Wang Gong be given Huguo and Wang Ke be given Baoyi instead, Emperor Zhaozong rejected the proposal based on the fact that he had already granted Li Keyong's request. Subsequently, Wang Xingyu, Li Maozhen, and Han, embarrassed that their request was rejected, marched on to the capital
211:
Wang Xingyu, who fled but was killed in flight, and forcing Li
Maozhen and Han into (temporary) submission to Emperor Zhaozong. In the aftermaths of this war, Wang Gong appeared to escape major repercussions, but was also unable to achieve his goal of taking over Huguo; rather, he remained at Baoyi.
210:
The three warlords' actions drew a serious reaction from Li Keyong, who marched south from Hedong and prepared to attack them. When Li Keyong reached Jiang
Prefecture, Wang Yao resisted him. Li Keyong quickly defeated and executed Wang Yao, and then marched on to the capital, eventually defeating
231:
Meanwhile, Wang Gong's rule of Baoyi was said to be violent, and imperial officials who went through Baoyi and who managed to offend him somehow where often arrested and killed. For example, in 898, when
Emperor Zhaozong summoned the retired official Wang Zhu
144:
to mediate, but the mediation was not successful. Wang Gong and Wang Yao, unable to prevail over Wang Ke, then requested that
Emperor Zhaozong send an alternative military governor for Huguo, and Emperor Zhaozong initially commissioned the
152:
to be the military governor of Huguo. However, at Li Keyong's insistence, Emperor
Zhaozong then commissioned Wang Ke as military governor of Huguo. When Wang Gong subsequently sent gifts to and persuaded three other warlords —
92:
Wang
Chongying died in 895. Wang Gong, who was referred to by that point as the military governor of Baoyi (as Shanguo had been renamed to Baoyi), coveted Huguo. However, the Huguo soldiers supported his cousin
228:
then defeated them, forcing them to stop the siege against Huguo. In 898, Baoyi and Xuanwu forces against attacked Huguo, and Li Keyong again sent Li Sizhao to help Wang Ke repel the attack.
401:
84:
made Wang
Chongying the military governor of Huguo and Wang Gong the acting military governor of Shanguo, keeping both circuits in the hands of the Wang family.
54:
Little is known about Wang Gong's early years, and it is not known when he was born. The first historical reference to him was in 887, when his father
207:) the military governor of Baoyi, and Wang Ke the military governor of Kuangguo Circuit (匡國, also in modern Weinan, which Wang Xingyue had governed).
201:. Under duress, Emperor Zhaozong was forced to issue an edict making Wang Gong the military governor of Huguo, Wang Xingyu's brother Wang Xingyue (
193:
to threaten
Emperor Zhaozong, and while they were there, they executed two former chancellors whom they perceived to be against them,
58:
was serving as the military governor of
Shanguo Circuit (陝虢, i.e., the same circuit that would later be known as Baoyi) and his uncle
146:
109:) the prefect of Jiang Prefecture (絳州, in modern Yuncheng) objected and attacked Wang Ke. They also wrote the major warlord
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In 897, Wang Gong launched another attack on Huguo, and this time he had the assistance from Zhu's generals Zhang
Cunjing (
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371:
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309:
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269:
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103:) who had been adopted as a son by Wang Chongrong—to succeed Wang Chongying. Both Wang Gong and his brother Wang Yao (
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121:), claiming that Wang Ke was not actually biologically a member of the Wang family, while Wang Ke's father-in-law
137:
355:
343:
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141:
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224:. They initially defeated Wang Ke just south of Yishi (猗氏, in modern Yuncheng), but Li Keyong's nephew
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244:) to succeed him. Several months later, Li Fan was himself killed in a mutiny, and the officer
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from Shanguo. That year, Wang Chongrong was assassinated by his officer Chang Xingru (
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was serving as the military governor of Huguo Circuit (護國, headquartered in modern
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the military governor of Fengxiang Circuit (鳳翔, headquartered in modern
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the military governor of Zhenguo Circuit (鎮國, headquartered in modern
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the military governor of Jingnan Circuit (靜難, headquartered in modern
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the military governor of Hedong Circuit (河東, headquartered in modern
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the military governor of Xuanwu Circuit (宣武, headquartered in modern
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170:
118:
39:
140:(Emperor Xizong's brother and successor) tried to send imperial
34:, who controlled Baoyi Circuit (保義, headquartered in modern
133:), who was the main rival to Zhu, supported Wang Ke.
80:). Shortly after the assassination, then-reigning
97:—a biological son of his uncle Wang Chongjian (
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98:
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42:) from 887, when he succeeded his father
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402:Tang dynasty jiedushi of Baoyi Circuit
27:) (d. 899) was a warlord late in the
7:
14:
216:
1:
88:As military governor of Baoyi
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240:
234:
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105:
99:
76:
24:
70:), which lay across the
46:, to his death in 899.
252:Notes and references
392:9th-century births
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351:New Book of Tang
339:Old Book of Tang
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323:New Book of Tang
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138:Emperor Zhaozong
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363:Zizhi Tongjian
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306:Zizhi Tongjian
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287:Zizhi Tongjian
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265:Zizhi Tongjian
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136:Then-reigning
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82:Emperor Xizong
60:Wang Chongrong
56:Wang Chongying
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44:Wang Chongying
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72:Yellow River
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32:Tang dynasty
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248:took over.
222:Yang Shihou
155:Wang Xingyu
397:899 deaths
386:Categories
195:Wei Zhaodu
167:Li Maozhen
147:chancellor
50:Background
226:Li Sizhao
123:Li Keyong
36:Sanmenxia
17:Wang Gong
366:, vols.
356:vol. 187
344:vol. 182
328:vol. 187
310:vol. 261
291:vol. 260
270:vol. 257
246:Zhu Jian
191:Chang'an
179:Han Jian
159:Xianyang
64:Yuncheng
187:Shaanxi
177:), and
175:Shaanxi
163:Shaanxi
150:Cui Yin
142:eunuchs
127:Taiyuan
115:Kaifeng
95:Wang Ke
29:Chinese
21:Chinese
220:) and
183:Weinan
131:Shanxi
68:Shanxi
23::
199:Li Xi
171:Baoji
119:Henan
40:Henan
197:and
376:261
372:260
368:257
217:張存敬
204:王行約
165:),
100:王重簡
77:常行儒
388::
374:,
370:,
354:,
342:,
326:,
308:,
298:^
289:,
277:^
268:,
241:李璠
235:王柷
185:,
173:,
161:,
129:,
117:,
106:王瑤
66:,
38:,
25:王珙
378:.
358:.
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232:(
19:(
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