Suike
Suike | |||||||||
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Born | Unknown | ||||||||
Died | Unknown | ||||||||
Spouse | Empress Gongjing | ||||||||
Issue | Shilu Pudu Abaohan Diku Digunai Salinian Sagezhou | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Father | Bahai | ||||||||
Mother | Empress Jie |
Suike | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Traditional Chinese | 綏可 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 绥可 | ||||||
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Suike was a chieftain of the Wanyan clan, the most dominant among the Jurchen tribes which later founded the Jin dynasty (1115–1234). He was the eldest of Bahai's five sons. Under Suike, the clan moved to the banks of the Anchuhu River, near modern-day Harbin.[1]
Suike was posthumously honoured with the temple name Xianzu (獻祖) by his descendant, Emperor Xizong of Jin.
Family
[edit]- Father: Bahai
- Mother: Bahai's primary consort, posthumously honoured as Empress Jie (節皇后)
- Spouse: Name unknown, posthumously honoured as Empress Gongjing (恭靖皇后)
- Sons:
- Shilu, posthumously honoured as Emperor Zhaozu
- Pudu (朴都)
- Abaohan (阿保寒)
- Diku (敵酷)
- Digunai (敵古乃)
- Salinian (撒里輦)
- Sagezhou (撒葛周)
References
[edit]- ^ Chan (1999), pp. 109, 112
Bibliography
[edit]- Chan, Hok-lam (1999). "From Tribal Chieftain to Sinitic Emperor: Leadership Contests and Succession Crises in the Jurchen-Jin State, 1115-1234". Journal of Asian History. 33 (2). JSTOR: 105–141. ISSN 0021-910X. JSTOR 41933140.
- Toqto'a (c. 1343). History of Jin. Vol. 1, 32, 63, 65.