Yuwen Tai | |||||||||
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(Posthumous) Emperor of Northern Zhou | |||||||||
Regent of Western Wei | |||||||||
Reign | 18 February 535[1] – 21 November 556 | ||||||||
Successor | Yuwen Jue | ||||||||
Monarch | |||||||||
Born | 505 | ||||||||
Died | 556 (aged 50–51) | ||||||||
Consorts |
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Issue |
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Dynasty | Northern Zhou | ||||||||
Father | Yuwen Gong | ||||||||
Mother | Lady Wang of Lelang |
Yuwen Tai (Chinese: 宇文泰; pinyin: Yǔwén Tài) (505/7 – 21 November 556[2]), nickname Heita (黑獺), formally Duke Wen of Anding (安定文公), later further posthumously honored by Northern Zhou initially as Prince Wen (文王) then as Emperor Wen (文皇帝) with the temple name Taizu (太祖), was the de facto ruler and paramount general of the Xianbei-led Chinese Western Wei dynasty, a branch successor state of the Northern Wei. In 534, Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei, seeking to assert power independent of the paramount general Gao Huan, fled to Yuwen's domain, and when Gao subsequently proclaimed Emperor Xiaojing of Eastern Wei emperor, a split of Northern Wei was effected, and when Yuwen subsequently poisoned Emperor Xiaowu to death around the new year 535 and declared his cousin Yuan Baoju emperor (as Emperor Wen), the split was formalized, with the part under Gao's and Emperor Xiaojing's control known as Eastern Wei and the part under Yuwen's and Emperor Wen's control known as Western Wei. For the rest of his life, Yuwen endeavored to make Western Wei, then much weaker than its eastern counterpart, a strong state, and after his death, his son Yuwen Jue seized the throne from Emperor Gong of Western Wei, establishing the Northern Zhou dynasty.
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