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    • Empress consort of the Chinese Tang dynasty

      • Empress Wei (Chinese: 韋皇后; pinyin: Wéi Huánghòu; personal name unknown; died July 21, 710) was an empress consort of the Chinese Tang dynasty. She was the second wife of Emperor Zhongzong, who reigned twice, and during his second reign, she tried to emulate the example of her mother-in-law Wu Zetian and seize power.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Wei_(Tang_dynasty)
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  2. Empress Wei (Chinese: 韋皇后; pinyin: Wéi Huánghòu; personal name unknown; died July 21, 710) was an empress consort of the Chinese Tang dynasty. She was the second wife of Emperor Zhongzong , [3] who reigned twice, and during his second reign, she tried to emulate the example of her mother-in-law Wu Zetian and seize power.

  3. empress of Tang dynasty. Learn about this topic in these articles: role in Chinese history. In China: Rise of the empress Wuhou. However, Zhongzong’s wife, the empress Wei, initiated a regime of utter corruption at court, openly selling offices.

  4. Jun 28, 2022 · Empress Wei was crowned Empress of China twice. She was the wife of Emperor Zhongzong and was the daughter-in-law of Wu Zetian. Empress Wei has been known to be one of the most ruthless empresses in Chinese history. Even historian Song Ruizhi described Empress Wei as “evil” and “hypocritical.”

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tang_dynastyTang dynasty - Wikipedia

    In 706 the wife of Emperor Zhongzong of Tang, Empress Wei (d. 710), persuaded her husband to staff government offices with his sister and her daughters, and in 709 requested that he grant women the right to bequeath hereditary privileges to their sons (which before was a male right only).

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wu_ZetianWu Zetian - Wikipedia

    Located to the east of Phoenix Gate within the Qianling Mausoleum–built near Chang'an in 706 to house the remains of Tang Gaozong, Empress Wu, and other royal members of the Chinese Tang dynasty–is the large Blank Tablet or Wordless Stele. This tablet is 6.3 meters tall and weighs 98 metric tons.

  7. Consort Wu, imperial consort rank Huifei (武惠妃) ( c. 698 – c. January 738 [1] ), posthumously Empress Zhenshun (貞順皇后, literally "the virtuous and serene empress"), was an imperial consort of the Chinese Tang dynasty, during the reign of Emperor Xuanzong.

  8. Wu Zhao (624–705), also known as Empress Wu Zetian, was the first and only woman emperor of China. With her exceptional intelligence, extraordinary competence in politics, and inordinate ambition, she ruled as the “Holy and Divine Emperor” of the Second Zhou Dynasty (690–705) for fifteen years.

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