Difference between revisions of "Wanli Emperor"
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+ | |width="35%"|Preceded by<br>'''[[Longqing Emperor]]''' | ||
+ | |width="25%"|'''Emperor of [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]]<br>[[1573]]-[[1620]]''' | ||
+ | |width="35%"|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Taichang Emperor]]''' | ||
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==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 19:27, 25 July 2014
- Died: 1620
- Reign: 1573-1620
- Other Names: 朱翊鈞 (Zhū Yìjūn)
- Chinese/Japanese: 萬歷帝 (Wànlì dì / banreki tei)
The Wanli Emperor was the thirteenth emperor of the Ming Dynasty. Though one of the more prominent emperors of the dynasty, and one whose reign saw many significant events, Wanli is perhaps most known for his frustration with the bureaucracy and/or distaste for the actual work of governing, to the point that he would often leave petitions and other matters to pile up; much governmental or Imperial matters of his reign were delayed severely, or even held up entirely, never being resolved.
Wanli ascended the throne in 1573 at age nine, spending the vast majority of his childhood both before and after that point in the Forbidden City. He was surrounded by state ritual and courtly obligations, and by eunuchs who controlled the bureaucracy to such an extent that even as emperor, he found himself unable to weaken their grip, or to truly exercise power himself. According to some sources, it was as a result of his frustration with this situation that Wanli refused on many occasions to meet with officials, to hear petitions, or to participate in state rituals. Other sources attribute it to a self-centered and entitled attitude, the result of a spoiled Imperial upbringing.
Major events of the Wanli reign included Toyotomi Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea in the 1590s, and the arrival of Jesuit Matteo Ricci at the Beijing court in 1620, just prior to the emperor's death that same year.
Preceded by Longqing Emperor |
Emperor of Ming 1573-1620 |
Succeeded by Taichang Emperor |
References
- Robert Tignor, Benjamin Elman, et al, Worlds Together, Worlds Apart, vol B, Fourth Edition, W.W. Norton & Co (2014), 499-500.