Emperor He, the son of Emperor Zhang, …

Years: 106 - 106

Emperor He, the son of Emperor Zhang, had ascended the Chinese throne at the age of nine in 88; he would reign for seventeen years.

It is during his reign that the Eastern Han begins its decline.

Strife between consort clans and eunuchs had begun when the Empress Dowager Dou (Emperor He's adoptive mother) made her own family members important government officials.

Her family was corrupt and intolerant of dissension.

Emperor He had been able to remedy the situation in 92 by removing the empress dowager's brothers with the aid of the eunuch Zheng Zhong and his brother Liu Qing,the Prince of Qinghe.

This in turn had created a precedent for eunuchs to be involved in important affairs of state, a trend that would continue to escalate for the next century and contribute to the fall of the Han dynasty.

Further, while Qiang revolts, spurred by Han officials who were corrupt, oppressive, or both, had begun during Emperor Zhang's reign, they have begun to create major problems for the Han during Emperor He's reign and would last until the reign of Emperor Ling.

Emperor He himself appears to be a largely kind and gentle man who, however, lacks his father's and grandfather Emperor Ming's acumen for governance and for judgment of character.

Although Emperor He's reign arguably initiated Han's long decline, notable scientific progresses are made during this period including the invention of paper by the eunuch Cai Lun in 105.

At the emperor’s death in 106, Liu Sheng, the elder of his surviving sons, is still young (his actual age is unrecorded) and believed to be constantly ill; the younger, Liu Long, is only one hundred days old.

Both are welcomed back to the palace, and Empress Deng creates Liu Long crown prince, believing that he would be healthier, and he is that evening proclaimed Emperor Shang, but dies later in 106.

Empress Dowager Deng, apprehensive that Liu Sheng might resent her for not making him emperor first, now refuses to make him emperor, and instead creates Prince Qing's twelve-year-old son Liu Hu as Emperor An.

She will rule remain as regent until her death in 121.

Related Events

Filter results