Li Shou

Emperor Zhaowen of Han
漢昭文帝
Emperor of Cheng-Han
Emperor of Cheng-Han
Reign338–343
PredecessorLi Qi
SuccessorLi Shi
Born300
Died343
Burial
Anchang Mausoleum (安昌陵)
Full name
Era name and dates
Hànxīng (漢興): 338–344
Posthumous name
Emperor Zhāowén (昭文皇帝, lit. "accomplished and civil")
Temple name
Zhōngzōng (中宗)
HouseLi
DynastyCheng-Han

Li Shou (Chinese: 李壽; 300–343), courtesy name Wukao (武考), also known by his posthumous name as the Emperor Zhaowen of (Cheng) Han ((成)漢昭文帝), was an emperor of the Di-led Chinese Cheng-Han dynasty. He was the cousin of Cheng-Han's founding emperor Li Xiong, but after he overthrew Li Xiong's son Li Qi in 338, he disassociated himself from Li Xiong's regime by renaming the state from Cheng to Han, and further setting up a different imperial ancestral temple. Traditional historians, however, did not consider his regime a separate state and treated the succession from Li Xiong to Li Shou's son Li Shi as a single Cheng-Han state. Li Shou was initially known for lenience and thriftiness—the same virtues commonly associated with Li Xiong—but later imitated the ruling style of Shi Hu, the emperor of Later Zhao, by ruling harshly and extravagantly, greatly inflicting burdens on the people and damaging the Cheng-Han state.


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