Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Who threatened Han Xiandi to give way?

Who threatened Han Xiandi to give way?

Emperor Xian of Han Dynasty was threatened to give way by Cao Pi Group.

Emperor Xian of Han refused to hand over the century-old land created by his ancestors to Cao Shi. Xelloss also ordered Cao Hong and Cao Xiu to take swords into the inner palace, carried Xian Di out of the temple, and bullied him into giving way. In order to save his life, Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty had to draw up the imperial edict of Zen and issue a national seal. As soon as Cao Pi saw the imperial edict and the arrival of the country, he was overjoyed and accepted it at once. Sima Yi and other ordinary civil and military officials dissuaded Cao Pi from thinking so rashly.

In order to avoid the discussion of the world, it is necessary to take some form, so the lively "abdication" drama began. Cao Pi made people pretend to be modest, saying that he was virtuous and sparse, and asked another Great Sage to be the heir of the Emperor of Heaven.

Emperor Xian of Han looked at his watch and thought that Xelloss really refused, so he wanted to give up. The ministers refused to let go and hurriedly said that when Cao Cao was made king of Wei, he refused again and again, and he agreed only after your majesty decreed the imperial edict. Now you should also lower the imperial edict of Zen, and Wang Wei and Cao Pi will certainly agree. As a last resort, Emperor Xian of the Han Dynasty had a Zen imperial edict drawn up for the second time.

Xelloss was filled with joy when he saw the second imperial edict, but it was not enough. In his view, it is not enough to get rid of the name of stealing the country and usurping the throne by later generations. We should build a "meditation altar", choose an auspicious day, do everything well under the altar, and let Emperor Xiandi personally present the national seal with both hands, and then we can eliminate the suspicion of others and the discussion of the world. At the thought of this, he wrote a 10% discount and politely declined Zen thinking.

Where does Emperor Xian know why? When he refused twice, he was confused. At this time, a minister named Hua Xin stood up and said, "Your Majesty can build an earthen altar, called Zen altar, which only gathers courtiers and Beijingers, and chooses an auspicious day to meditate clearly. On the one hand, it will let the people all over the world know that your Majesty gave up voluntarily, and on the other hand, your children and grandchildren will be benefited by Wang Wei, and no one dares to harm them."

When Emperor Xian of Han saw water under the bridge, he had to follow suit. So he sent someone to set a place in Fanyang, build a three-story altar, choose a good date and hold a abdication ceremony.

Related instructions

In the twenty-fifth year of Jian 'an (220), Wang died and his son Cao Pi succeeded to the throne. At that time, although Sun Quan and Liu Bei tried to go north to the Central Plains, it was basically impossible, and peace in the hinterland of the Central Plains was a foregone conclusion. It is the will of the people to get rid of the old and innovate. All kinds of forces are pushing Cao Pi to take action. Those Cao Shi subordinates are also fantasizing about how to celebrate each other and how to share a piece of the new dynasty. So I went to persuade Liu, the emperor of the Han Dynasty, to make an example and give the throne to Wang Wei.

In the first year of Yankang (220), 65438+February 10, Cao Pi forced Liu Xie to abdicate to him, and Liu Xie sued the ancestral temple, making Zhang Yin play the imperial edict, and the Zen position was in Cao Pi.

Cao Pi boarded the Zen altar of Fanyangge and accepted the imperial seal, which is the memorial. Later, he entered Xudu, changed the first year of Yankang to the first year, took the title of Wei, honored Cao Cao as Emperor Wu, made Liu Xie the Duke of Shanyang, allowed him to serve the Han Dynasty in his own fief, and built a Han Temple to serve the Han Dynasty. Cao Pi also left a kind word for Liu Xie: "I can enjoy the beauty of the world with you."

Because it was widely rumored that Liu Xie was killed at that time, Liu Bei became emperor as a relative of the Han clan, known as "Shu Han" in history, and posthumous title Liu Xie was called "filial piety".

In the second year of Wei Mingdi Qinglong (234), in March, Geng Yin (2 1 year in April), Liu Xie died, and Wei Mingdi Cao Sao led the ministers to personally weep and sacrifice. In August, Ren Shen was buried in the Zen Mausoleum with the etiquette of Emperor Gaozu. Posthumous title offered filial piety to the emperor. When he was buried, Wei Mingdi "cried for fear of making tin" and made Sun Guishi, an official of Liu Kang and Liu Xie, as Shanyanggong.

Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Liu Xie