Duke Huai of Jin

{{Short description|Ruler of the state of Jin}}

{{Infobox royalty

|name=Duke Huai of Jin
晉懷公

|title =

|succession=Duke of Jin

|reign=637 BC

|predecessor=Duke Hui

|successor= Duke Wen

|spouse=Huai Ying

|full name=Ancestral name: (姬)
Given name: Yǔ (圉)

|father=Duke Hui

|mother=Princess of Liang

|death_date=637 BC

|posthumous name=Duke Huai (懷公)

|house=Ji

|dynasty=Jin

}}

{{chinese |title=Yu

|c={{linktext|圉}} |p=Yǔ |w=Yü

|altname=Posthumous name |t2={{linktext|晉|懷|公}} |s2={{linktext|晋|怀|公}} |p2=Jìn Huái Gōng |w2=Chin Huai Kung

}}

Duke Huai of Jin, personal name Ji Yu, was briefly the duke of the Jin state in 637 BC.{{anchor|History|Biography}}

Life

Yu's father was the future Duke Hui of Jin, who married a princess of Liang during his exile there.{{cite web |url=http://www.guoxue.com/shibu/24shi/shiji/sj_039.htm |script-title=zh:晋世家 |trans-title=House of Jin |work=Records of the Grand Historian |author=Sima Qian |language=Chinese |accessdate=12 April 2012}} Ji became known as {{nowrap|Crown Prince Yu}} when his father assumed the duchy of Jin. In 643 BC, Prince Yu was sent to the State of Qin as a hostage, where he married Princess Huai Ying (懷嬴), a daughter of Duke Mu of Qin, the powerful ruler of Qin at the time. In 641 BC, Qin conquered and annexed Liang.

In 638 BC, Duke Hui of Jin became ill. As Prince Yu was a hostage in Qin and his mother's state had been destroyed, he was worried that Duke Hui might replace him as crown prince with one of his other sons. He decided to escape back to Jin. Huai Ying refused to escape with him but agreed not to reveal his plan.

Duke Hui died in the ninth month of 637 BC, and Prince Yu ascended the throne, to be known as Duke Huai of Jin. Duke Mu of Qin, however, was angry at Prince Yu for his escape from Qin and supported Duke Hui's brother Chong'er. He even married five of his daughters, including Huai Ying, to Chong'er. With the support of the Qin army, as well as Jin generals Luan Zhi and Xi Hu (郤縠), Chong'er killed Duke Huai at Gaoliang and ascended the throne as Duke Wen of Jin.

References

{{reflist|30em}}

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{{s-hou|House of Ji||||637 BC|House of Ji}}

{{s-reg}}

{{s-bef

| before = Duke Hui of Jin

}}

{{s-ttl|

| title = Duke of Jin

| years = 637 BC

}}

{{s-aft

| after = Duke Wen of Jin

}}

{{s-end}}

{{Monarchs of Jin (Chinese state)}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Huai of Jin, Duke}}

Category:Year of birth unknown

Category:Monarchs of Jin (Chinese state)

Category:7th-century BC Chinese monarchs

Category:630s BC deaths

Category:7th-century BC murdered monarchs

Category:Assassinated Chinese politicians

Category:Assassinated Chinese heads of state

Category:Ancient assassinated Chinese people