Duke Li of Chen

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Duke Li of Chen
陳厲公
14th ruler of Chen
Reign706–700 BC
PredecessorChen Tuo
SuccessorDuke Zhuang of Chen
Died700 BC
IssueChen Wan (陳完)
Names
Gui Yue (媯躍)
Posthumous name
Duke Li (厲公)
HouseGui
DynastyChen
FatherDuke Huan of Chen
MotherPrincess of Cai

Duke Li of Chen (Chinese: 陳厲公; pinyin: Chén Lì Gōng; reigned 706 BC – died 700 BC), personal name Gui Yue, was a duke of the Chen state.[1]

Duke Li was a son of Duke Huan, who died under strange circumstances. He was believed to have become demented and went missing in the first month of 707 BC, before his body was found sixteen days later. The uncertainty threw the state into turmoil, and Duke Huan's younger brother Chen Tuo took the opportunity to murder Duke Li's elder brother Crown Prince Mian and usurp the throne.[2][3]

Duke Li's mother was a princess of the neighbouring Cai state. After Chen Tuo's usurpation, the Cai army attacked the Chen state and killed Chen Tuo in 706 BC. The marquis of Cai then installed Duke Li to the Chen throne.[3][4]

Duke Li died in 700 BC, after a reign of seven years. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Lin (Duke Zhuang).[1]

Duke Li was the father of Chen Wan (陳完), who later fled to the Jiang Qi state in 672 BC. The Tian (田) clan descended from Chen Wan grew increasingly powerful over the centuries and eventually usurped the Jiang Qi throne and founded the Tian Qi state.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Han 2010, pp. 2782–4.
  2. ^ Yang 2009, p. 104.
  3. ^ a b Han 2010, pp. 2780–1.
  4. ^ Yang 2009, p. 109.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Han, Zhaoqi, ed. (2010). "Houses of Chen and Qi". Shiji 史记 (in Chinese). Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company. ISBN 978-7-101-07272-3.
  • Yang, Bojun, ed. (2009). 春秋左传注 [Annotated Chunqiu Zuozhuan] (in Chinese) (3rd revised ed.). Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company. ISBN 978-7-101-07074-3.