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  1. Emperor Jing of Han (188 BC – 9 March 141 BC), born Liu Qi, was the sixth emperor of the Han dynasty from 157 to 141 BC. His reign saw the limiting of the power of the feudal kings and princes which resulted in the Rebellion of the Seven States in 154 BC.

  2. List of emperors of the Han dynasty. Western Han miniature pottery infantry (foreground) and cavalry (background); in 1990, when the tomb complex of Emperor Jing of Han ( r. 157 – 141 BC) and his wife Empress Wang Zhi (d. 126 BC) was excavated north of Yangling, over 40,000 miniature pottery figures were unearthed.

  3. Jingdi was the posthumous name (shi) of the fifth emperor of the Han dynasty, during whose reign (157–141 bc) an attempt was made to limit the power of the great feudal princes, who had been enfeoffed in separate kingdoms during the tolerant rule of Jingdi’s father, the Wendi emperor (reigned.

  4. Hanyangling Museum, also called Hanyangling, Tomb of Emperor Jingdi, Yangling Mausoleum of Han Dynasty, is the joint grave of Emperor Jing of Han Dynasty and his empress. It took 28 years in total to complete the mausoleum, starting from 153 BC and finished in 126 BC.

  5. Emperor Jing of Han Dynasty (汉景帝), also known as Liu Qi, was the sixth emperor of the Han Dynasty and ruled from 157 BC to 141 BC. He was the son of Emperor Wen of Han and Empress Dou and is considered one of the greatest emperors of the Han Dynasty.

  6. Mar 8, 2011 · Emperor Jingdi 漢景帝 (188-141, r. 157-141 BCE), personal name Liu Qi 劉啟, was a ruler of the Former Han dynasty 前漢 (206 BC-8 CE). He was a son of Emperor Wen 漢文帝 (r. 180-157) and Empress Dou 竇皇后. He continued the politics of relaxation his father had inherited from the reign of Empress Dowager Lü 呂太后 (r. 188-180).

  7. Emperor Jing of Han, born Liu Qi, was the sixth emperor of the Han dynasty from 157 to 141 BC. His reign saw the limiting of the power of the feudal kings and princes which resulted in the Rebellion of the Seven States in 154 BC.