Yang Pu (Ming dynasty) explained

Yang Pu
Native Name:zh|楊溥
Birth Date:1372
Birth Place:Shishou, Hubei
Death Place:Jingshi
Office:Senior Grand Secretary
Term:1444–1446
Predecessor:Yang Shiqi
Successor:Cao Nai
Office1:Grand Secretary
Term1:1424–1446
Monarch1:Xuande
Yingzong
Education:jinshi degree (1400)
Blank1:Courtesy name
Data1:Hongji
Blank2:Art name
Data2:Nanyang
Blank3:Posthumous name
Data3:Wending
Module:
Child:yes
T:楊溥
S:杨溥
P:Yáng Pǔ

Yang Pu (1372–1446), courtesy name Hongji, art name Nanyang, was a prominent Chinese scholar-official during the Ming dynasty. He was appointed as the Grand Secretary in 1424, at the start of the Hongxi Emperor's reign, and held the position until his death. In his final two years, he served as the Senior Grand Secretary. In recognition of his contributions, he was given the posthumous name Wending.

Yang Pu was born in southern China, specifically in present-day Shishou County, Jingzhou, Hubei. He achieved the highest level of success in the official examinations, known as the palace examinations, and was granted the rank of jinshi in 1400. After this accomplishment, he served at the Hanlin Academy.

Along with Huang Huai, Yang Shiqi, and Yang Rong, he was part of the inner circle of Crown Prince Zhu Gaochi. However, in September 1414, after the Yongle Emperor's return from a campaign in Mongolia, Zhu Gaoxu accused his elder brother, Zhu Gaochi, of neglecting his duties. As a result, the emperor punished the crown prince's advisors, including Grand Secretaries Huang Huai and Yang Shiqi, as well as Yang Pu, who was removed from his position and imprisoned.

After Zhu Gaochi ascended to the throne as the Hongxi Emperor, Yang Pu was released and appointed as Grand Secretary on 9 September 1424. He held this position until his death, serving as one of the "Three Yangs" (along with Yang Shiqi and Yang Rong). This trio of highly experienced, capable, and influential officials governed the Ming dynasty from the late 1420s under the leadership of the Hongxi Emperor's eldest son and successor, the Xuande Emperor. After the Xuande Emperor's death in 1435, "Three Yangs" continued to serve alongside Empress Dowager Zhang, the widow of the Hongxi Emperor and mother of the Xuande Emperor, as well as leading eunuchs. In 1444, following the death of Yang Shiqi, Yang Pu assumed his role as Senior Grand Secretary.

The Three Yangs were also renowned poets of their time, writing in the popular style of taige ti (secretariat style). Their poems were simple and monotonous, reflecting the shared values of the official class and praising the able government and monarch for the country's prosperity.

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