align=center style="background:#ccf; border-bottom:2px solid" colspan=2 | Zhong Hu of Cai | |
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align=right style="border-top:1px solid" | Reign: | 11th century BC - 11th or 10th century BC |
align=right style="border-top:1px solid" | Parent(s): | Ji Du (姬度) |
align=right style="border-top:1px solid" | Spouse(s): | Unknown |
align=right style="border-top:1px solid" | Issue(s): | Ji Huang (姬荒) |
Ancestral name (姓): | Ji (姬) | |
Given name (名): | Hu (胡) | |
Courtesy name (字): | Unknown | |
Posthumous name (謚): | Unknown | |
Styled: | Hu, the Elder of Cai (蔡仲胡) | |
General note: Dates given here are in the Julian calendar. They are not in the proleptic Gregorian calendar. | ||
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Cai Zhong Hu (Chinese: Chinese: {{linktext|蔡|仲|胡, lit. "Hu, Elder of Cai"), born Ji Hu (Chinese: {{linktext|姬|胡), was the only known son of Ji Du, the first lord of Cai.
Ji Du was removed from his office after participating in the Rebellion of the Three Guards against the regency of the Duke of Zhou. However, his son made an effort to get his manners straight and be kind to people[1] and was sent by the Duke of Zhou to Lu as an ambassador. Following this, King Cheng restored his father's fief to him and his son inherited it after him.