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reign
322-325
Life
Emperor Sima Shao of the Jin Dynasty, zi Dao Qi.
The eldest son of Sima Rui, Emperor Of Jinyuan, half-brother of Emperor Wen of Jin, and mother of the Xun clan.
The second emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty.
Life
In 322, Sima Shao took the throne.
In 324, Sima Shao quelled Wang Dun's rebellion, stopped pursuing Wang Dun's henchmen, and used Wang Dao to stabilize the emperor's authority, and maintained a harmonious attitude with the Jiangdong clan, successfully aftertaking care of the "Wang Dun Rebellion" and stabilizing the situation of the Eastern Jin Dynasty.
In 325, Sima Shao died of illness, and was buried in Wuping Mausoleum (present-day North of Jilong Mountain, Xuanwu District, Nanjing).
He died at the age of 27.
323
Emperor Yuan drank and hated, and Emperor Ming succeeded to the throne
324
Crusade against Wang Dun, Guo Pu divination
appraise
Personality: Intelligent, intelligent and decisive since childhood, benevolent and respectful
When the Eastern Jin Dynasty was first established, the soldiers were in chaos, the people were ruined, the national strength was empty and tired, and the powerful ministers Wang Dun and others acted as a blessing, and the Eastern Jin Dynasty regime was in danger of collapse at any time.
Sima Shao was wise and judgmental, sensible in matters, quelled the rebellion, and relied on the weak central government to successfully balance the power and the country.
Sima Shao also reconciled to a certain extent the contradictions between the Nandu qiao surname and the Wu surname Shi clan, stabilized the situation, and made the society show a trend of developing toward stability. Although his reign was short, his impact on stabilizing the overall situation of the country was very far-reaching.
Bai Shouyi's "General History of China": Among the emperors of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, only the Ming Emperor could make a difference.
Tang Fang Xuanling et al. "Book of Jin": "The emperor is clever and organic, especially fine in physics." At that time, the soldiers were hungry and hungry, more than half of them died of the epidemic, and the shortcomings were even worse, and things were extremely difficult. Wang Dun threatened the Lord and would move the artifact. The emperor rode to drive and obey, with the weak to control the strong, sneaking and arbitrarily, and clearing the Great Kun. The four prefectures of Jing and Xiang were re-granted, in order to divide the upper class, correct the chaos, and strengthen the weak branches. Although the country is shallow, the scale is far away. ”