Liu Chen
For the American plasma physicist, see Liu Chen (physicist).
Liu Chen | |||||||||
Statue of Liu Chen in the Temple of Marquis Wu, Chengdu | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 劉諶 | ||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 刘谌 | ||||||||
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Liu Chen (died 263), Prince of Beidi (北地王),[1] was the fifth son of Liu Shan, the second ruler of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period of Chinese history. Liu Chen opposed the plans of Qiao Zhou to surrender to the opposing force under general Deng Ai from the rival state of Cao Wei. Liu Chen attempted to convince his father to fight for the honor of Shu, so Liu Bei (the founder of Shu) could look upon him as a redeemed ruler of Shu. However, Liu Shan threw Liu Chen out of the court for this. He then went to Liu Bei's ancestral temple and killed his wife and children before committing suicide.[2]
Liu Chen's story is reenacted in a play of the Shaoxing opera.
Family
Main article: Shu Han family trees
See also
Notes
- ↑ Created 259. Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 33, p. 899
- ↑ Records of the Three Kingdoms, chapter 33, p. 900
References
- Low, C.C. (1994). A General History of China, vol. 4. Singapore, Singapore: Canfonian PTE Ltd. p. 508. ISBN 981-00-6288-5.
- Chen Shou (1977) [280s or 290s]. Pei Songzhi, ed. 三國志 [Records of the Three Kingdoms]. Taibei: Dingwen Printing.
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