Duke Wen of Lu (Spring and Autumn period) explained

Duke Wen of Lu
魯文公
Succession:Ruler of Lu
Reign:626 BC - 609 BC
Predecessor:Duke Xi of Lu
Successor:Duke Xuan of Lu
Death Date:609 BC
Spouse:Chu Jiang (出姜)
Jing Ying (敬嬴)
Issue:Prince Wu (惡)
Prince Shi (視)
Tui (俀), Duke Xuan of Lu
Shu Xi (叔肸)
Full Name:Ancestral name

Ji (姬)
Given name: Xing (興)

House:Ji
Dynasty:Lu
Father:Duke Xi of Lu
Posthumous Name:Duke Wen (文公)

Duke Wen of Lu (; died 19 January 609 BC), personal name Ji Xing, was a duke of Lu state, ruling from 626 BC to 609 BC. His father was Duke Xi, whom he succeeded.

In 619 BC, King Xiang of Zhou died. The next year, in 618 BC, Wei, the Count of Mao (毛伯衛), a Zhou official, went to Lu to "request" for tribute. Gongyang Zhuan notes that the Spring and Autumn Annals used such wording as a mockery, pointing out that "kings do not make requests."[1] Also, Zuo Zhuan points out that the late king had not been buried, since the Spring and Autumn Annals made no mention of a king's order.[2] A month after this "request," King Xiang was laid to rest.

In 616 BC, Souman (鄋瞞), a Di tribe, attacked Lu after an invasion of nearby Qi. Duke Wen ordered Shusun Dechen (叔孫得臣), a minister of Lu and a member of the powerful Three Huan clans, to fight the Souman. On 9 September 616 BC, Shusun Decheng defeated the Souman army at Xian (咸), capturing and executing its leader Qiaoru (僑如). Later, Shusun Dechen named one of his sons after Qiaoru.

After Duke Wen of Lu died in 609 BC, his son, Crown Prince Wu (惡), succeeded him, but, only months later, Prince Wu was murdered by Duke Xi's brother Prince Sui (遂; also known as Dongmen Xiangzhong 東門襄仲), who installed Prince Tui (Duke Xuan), another of Duke Wen's sons.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Miller, Harry . The Gongyang Commentary on The Spring and Autumn Annals: A Full Translation . Palgrave Macmillan . 2015 . 9781137497635 . 131.
  2. Durrant, Stephen; Li, Wai-yee; Schaberg, David (2016). Zuo Tradition/Zuozhuan: Commentary on the "Spring and Autumn Annals" (1st ed.). Seattle: University of Washington Press.