Wu Ze Tian (武则天)
Chinese. Name of the only woman in the history of
China to
assume the title of Empress Regnant (Huang Di),
ruling China between
AD 690 and 705, after she rose to power through cunning deceit and
murder. A talented woman, ruthless in her endeavors to seize power,
she is believed
to even have poisoned her oldest son and killed her infant daughter
in the process, while she exiled yet
another son. She was first recruited into the palace as an imperial
concubine during the reign of Emperor Tai Zong, after whose death
she became a nun, though she later returned as an imperial concubine
to Emperor Gao Zong. Now a rival of Empress Wang, she set out to
gain the affection of the Emperor and framed the Empress in the
killing of her infant daughter. Empress Wang was subsequently
executed, and Wu Ze Tian was made Empress. From AD 665 to 683, she
co-reigned with her husband, but after the latter's death in 683 AD,
she became the de factor ruler through her sons. However, to secure
even more power, the following year she disposed a third son, Emperor
Zhong Zong, whom she
dethroned in favour of
her youngest son Emperor Rui Zong, but in 690 AD she had him yield
the throne to herself, thus becoming Empress Regnant
and founding her own dynasty, known as the Second Zhou Dynasty (周朝)
and which briefly interrupted the Tang Dynasty (唐朝). In order to
consolidate her power and prevent a revolt from other Tang Dynasty
princes, she relied on cruel punishment and had numerous
political enemies murdered.
During her reign she elevated the status of
Buddhism
over
Taoism,
and encouraged agriculture. In 705, while
Wu Ze Tian was seriously ill, the then prime minister led the court
in support of the restoration of Emperor Zhong Zong.
Empress Wu Ze Tian died in the same year and was buried in Qianling
with her husband Gao Zong.
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