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王处直[查看正文] [修改] [查看历史]ctext:122740
关系 | 对象 | 文献依据 |
---|---|---|
type | person | |
name | 王处直 | |
name-style | 允明 | 《旧唐书·卷一百八十六》:处直,字允明,处存母弟也。 |
born | 862 | |
died | 922 | |
authority-cbdb | 380333 | |
authority-wikidata | Q65911692 | |
authority-wikidata | Q7550824 | |
link-wikipedia_zh | 王处直 | |
link-wikipedia_en | Wang_Chuzhi |
生平
他的家族世代隶属神策军,其父叫王寮。族父王宗因经商而富比王侯,为京师巨富。唐朝末年黄巢之乱后,他堂兄义武节度使王处存据定州割据,唐昭宗乾宁二年(895年),王处存去世,其子王郜继为节度使,亲近李克用。王处直为后院中军都知兵马使。
光化三年(900年),朱温进攻义武军,王郜派王处直迎击,王处直战败回军兵变,王郜出逃投奔李克用。张存敬派兵攻城,王处直登城呼曰:「敝邑于朝廷未尝不忠,于藩邻未尝失礼,不虞君之涉吾地,何也?」朱温遣人报之曰:「何以附太原而弱邻道?」王处直报曰:「吾兄与太原同时立勋王室,地又亲邻,修好往来,常道也。请从此改图。」朱温许之,仍归罪于孔目吏梁问,出绢十万匹,牛酒以犒汴州军。存敬修盟而退。朱温因此表授旄钺,于光化四年(901年)五月,授节,检校尚书左仆射、太原县开国男。天复三年(903年)秋,加检校司空,不久加司徒、中书门下平章事。
天佑元年,加太保,进太原郡王。天佑四年(907年)三月,朱温称帝,建立后梁,年号开平。王处直加太尉(或称检校太尉)兼侍中。开平三年(909年,天佑六年),加开府仪同三司、检校太师兼中书令,进封北平王,福建节度使王审知封闽王,广州节度使刘隐封南平王。后梁进攻成德节度使赵王王熔,王处直恐惧唇亡齿寒,投靠晋王李存勖。
921年,王熔被义子张文礼杀害,王处直没有响应李存勖讨伐,被李存勖猜忌。王处直就派自己的儿子新州(今河北涿鹿)团练使王郁秘密联络耶律阿保机,背叛李存勖。定州将领不愿联络契丹。小吏和昭训劝其义子王都举事,王都于是抓住王处直,囚于西宅,自为留后。王氏子孙及王处直部下都被王都杀戮殆尽。次年(922年)正月朔旦,王都于西宅拜访王处直,王处直奋起揕其胸而呼曰:「逆贼!吾何负尔?」然而左右无兵,王处直遂欲咬其鼻,王都掣袖而走,王处直遂被杀。同光二年(924年)二月五日,葬曲阳县敦信乡仰盘山。
王处直墓
王处直墓位于河北省曲阳县,墓中发现大量的壁画和浮雕。壁画面积为100平方米,保存较好,色彩鲜艳,内容丰富,包括人物、花鸟、山水、器物、天象图等各类题材,其绘画水平之高,题材之完备,在目前中国北方发现的五代时期墓葬中实为罕见。汉白玉浮雕为16块,包括十二生肖、散乐图、奉侍图等,构思精巧,线条流畅,雕刻精美。内出土的彩绘浮雕武士石刻(上图)于1994年被盗往海外,后于2001年被追回。
家庭
妻
• 博陵郡夫人崔氏,在王处直生前去世
• 豳国夫人费氏,在王处直生前去世
• 楚国夫人卜氏,在王处直生前去世
• 陇西齐国夫人
子
• 王郁,新州团练使、特进、检校太保
• 王都,实为养子,宣力起运功臣,起复云麾将军、检校太尉兼侍中、上柱国、太原郡开国侯,食邑一千户,王处直墓志称其系楚国夫人所生
• 王鄑,光禄大夫、检校司徒、守左骁卫大将军
• 王郇,光禄大夫、检校司徒,早亡
• 王邠,金紫光禄大夫、检校刑部尚书
• 王䢼,银青光禄大夫、检校左散骑常侍,早亡
• 王郴,检校右散骑常侍,早亡
• 王{威阜},检校太子宾客、左千牛卫将军
女
• 长女,早亡
• 次女,适幽州中军使周绍弼,早亡
• 三女,适北京留守李存纪(未知与李存勖弟是否一人)
• 四女,剃度为尼
• 幼女
注释
显示更多...: Background As military governor During Tang Dynasty After Tang Dynasty Overthrow and death Personal information
Background
Wang Chuzhi was born in 862, during the reign of Emperor Yizong of Tang. His family was from the Tang Dynasty capital Chang'an, and his ancestors had served as officers in the imperial Shence Armies for generations. His father Wang Zong (王宗) was not only a highly ranked general in the Shence Armies, but was also a skillful merchant. It was said that Wang Zong became so rich that he was able to be extravagant in his food and to have thousands of servants. He presumably followed his older brother Wang Chucun to Yiwu Circuit when Wang Chucun was made Yiwu's military governor in 879 by Emperor Yizong's son and successor Emperor Xizong and became a military officer there.
It was said that Wang Chuzhi favored sorcery, and he became friendly with the sorcerer Li Yingzhi (李应之). Li Yingzhi himself had obtained a boy named Liu Yunlang from Xingyi (陉邑, in modern Shijiazhuang, Hebei) and adopted the boy as his own son, but seeing how Wang Chuzhi did not himself have son at that point, he gave the boy to Wang Chuzhi, stating, "this boy has a honored appearance." Wang Chuzhi adopted the boy and changed his name to Wang Du. While Wang Chuzhi later had a son named Wang Yu (王郁) by a concubine (not his wife), he did not favor Wang Yu, and instead favored Wang Du.
By 900, Wang Chuzhi was serving as an officer under Wang Chucun's son and successor Wang Gao, when Yiwu came under the attack of Zhang Cunjing, a general under the major warlord Zhu Quanzhong the military governor of Xuanwu Circuit (宣武, headquartered in modern Kaifeng, Henan). Wang Gao put Wang Chuzhi in command of the Yiwu army to resist Zhang's attack. However, he did not listen to Wang Chuzhi's counsel of not engaging the Xuanwu forces immediately, but rather wearing out the Xuanwu forces before actually engaging them. Rather, he listened to the secretary Liang Wen (梁汶), who advocated an immediate engagement against the Xuanwu troops, and therefore ordered Wang Chuzhi to carry out that plan. Zhang defeated Wang Chuzhi and inflicted heavy casualties. Wang Chuzhi barely escaped back to Yiwu's capital Ding Prefecture (定州). Wang Gao panicked and fled to the territory of Yiwu's ally Li Keyong the military governor of Hedong Circuit (河东, headquartered in modern Taiyuan, Shanxi). (Already upset over how his father did not love him, Wang Yu accompanied Wang Gong on this flight, and subsequently married Li Keyong's daughter.) The Yiwu soldiers supported Wang Chuzhi to take over the circuit. He subsequently negotiated a peace with Zhu, promising to submit to Zhu from this point on and no longer be allied with Li Keyong and also giving Zhu a tribute of silk. Zhu thus withdrew, and at his request Wang Chuzhi was commissioned by then-reigning Emperor Zhaozong (Emperor Xizong's brother and successor) as the new military governor of Yiwu.
As military governor
During Tang Dynasty
In 901, Zhu Quanzhong launched a major five-pronged attack on Li Keyong, intending to finally capture Hedong's capital Taiyuan Municipality. As Zhu's ally, Wang Chuzhi commanded the Yiwu troops that served as one of the five prongs of the attack. Zhu's and his allies's forces put Taiyuan under siege, but were eventually forced to withdraw due to rains and illnesses. In 904, Emperor Zhaozong, who by that point was under Zhu's physical control, gave Wang the title of Taibao (太保, one of the Three Excellencies) and created him the Prince of Taiyuan.
After Tang Dynasty
In 907, Zhu Quanzhong had Emperor Zhaozong's son and successor Emperor Ai yield the throne to him, ending Tang Dynasty and starting a new Later Liang with him as its Emperor Taizu. Emperor Taizu bestowed the honorary chancellor title of Shizhong (侍中) on Wang Chuzhi, and created him the Prince of Beiping.
After the establishment of the new dynasty, Wang Chuzhi's Yiwu Circuit and neighboring Wushun Circuit (武顺, headquartered in modern Shijiazhuang, Hebei), which was governed by Wang Rong the Prince of Zhao, continued to, as they did during Tang Dynasty, refuse to submit taxes to the imperial government, but was often offering tributes to Emperor Taizu. Despite this, however, Emperor Taizu believed that they would eventually turn against him, and therefore considered to forcibly seize them under direct control. In 910, he had his attendants Du Tingyin (杜廷隐) and Ding Yanhui (丁延徽) forcibly seize Wushun's Shen (深州) and Ji (冀州, both in modern Hengshui, Hebei) by trick, and then prepared to have his general Wang Jingren attack Wushun's capital Zhen Prefecture. In response, Wang Rong broke away from Later Liang (effectively become the ruler of an independent Zhao state while changing the name of his circuit from Wushun back to its Tang name of Chengde) and sought emergency aid from Li Keyong's son and successor Li Cunxu the Prince of Jin, as well as Liu Shouguang the military governor of Lulong Circuit (卢龙, headquartered in modern Beijing), who carried the title of Prince of Yan. Knowing that Yiwu would be the next target if Zhao fell, Wang Chuzhi also sent an emissary to Taiyuan, offering to support Li Cunxu as the common leader. Liu refused to render help, but Li Cunxu responded, first sending a detachment under his general Zhou Dewei and then leading the main Jin army himself to aid Wang Rong. During the subsequent campaign between combined Jin/Zhao forces and Later Liang forces, Wang Chuzhi also contributed an army to fight on the Jin/Zhao side, and together, they crushed the Later Liang forces under Wang Jingren in spring 911. From this point, Chengde and Yiwu were Jin allies, and resumed the use of the Tang Dynasty era name Tianyou (as Jin and its allies ostensibly sought the reestablishment of Tang). After Wang Jingren fled, Li Cunxu gave chase, going as far as briefly putting Wei Prefecture (魏州, in modern Handan, Hebei) under siege, but, concerned that Liu would attack him from the rear, withdrew and returned to Zhao.
Subsequently, Liu, hearing of Later Liang's defeat, was considering claiming imperial title himself. He sent messengers to Wang Rong and Wang Chuzhi, suggesting that they should honor him as Shangfu (尚父, meaning "imperial father," a highly honorary title that was rarely bestowed and only on highly honored senior officials). When Wang Rong informed this to Li Cunxu, Li Cunxu, pursuant to suggestions that his generals made that making Liu more arrogant would cause him to push himself into doom, signed a joint declaration with Wang Rong, Wang Chuzhi, as well as three other military governors under Li Cunxu (Li Cunxu's cousin Li Sizhao, Zhou, and Song Yao (宋瑶)) honoring Liu as Shangfu. Faced with this, the Later Liang emperor tried to keep Liu at least nominally a vassal by offering him the title of Caifangshi (采访使). Liu thereafter nevertheless declared himself the Emperor of Yan.
In winter 911, Liu attacked Yiwu Circuit. Wang Chuzhi sought aid from Jin. Li Cunxu sent Zhou to rendezvous with the Zhao officer Wang Deming (Wang Rong's adoptive son) and the Yiwu officer Cheng Yan (程岩), to attack Yan. By late 912, with Li Cunxu himself also sieging Yan's capital You Prefecture (幽州), the city fell. Liu fled but was captured in spring 913, ending Yan. Li Cunxu took Liu and his father Liu Rengong (whom Liu Shouguang had overthrown and replaced) captive, and was set to return to Taiyuan with them, when both Wang Chuzhi and Wang Rong requested that he took his victory march through Yiwu and Chengde. Li Cunxu agreed, and when he visited Yiwu, Wang Chuzhi and he went to worship at the temple of Mount Heng together. (After the victory tour, Li Cunxu took Liu Shouguang and Liu Rengong back to Taiyuan and executed them.) Thereafter, Wang Chuzhi and Wang Rong submitted a joint petition offering the title of Shangshu Ling (尚书令)—which no Tang official had dared to use since the early Tang emperor Emperor Taizong carried that title while he was still the Prince of Qin under his father Emperor Gaozu)—to Li Cunxu. Li Cunxu accepted, and thereafter began to organize a provisional government under Emperor Taizong's precedent.
In 918, Li Cunxu, who had taken Tianxiong Circuit (天雄, headquartered at Wei Prefecture) at that point, prepared a major operation intending to capture Later Liang's capital Daliang. Wang Chuzhi sent some 10,000 soldiers to contribute to Li Cunxu's campaign, which, however, ended with a mutually-destructive battle at Huliu Slope (胡柳陂, in modern Heze, Shandong), with both Jin and Later Liang forces suffering two-thirds casualties and Jin forces forced to withdraw.
Overthrow and death
In 921, Wang Rong was killed in a mutiny, and the mutineers supported Wang Deming to take over Chengde. Wang Deming accepted, and changed his name back to his birth name of Zhang Wenli. Li Cunxu, after initially pretending to accept Zhang's offer of allegiance, declared a general campaign against Zhang to avenge Wang Rong. Wang Chuzhi, however, had misgivings, believing that if Li Cunxu took direct control of Chengde, Yiwu would be taken over as well, and therefore suggested to Li Cunxu that he accept Zhang's submission. Li Cunxu refused.
Concerned, Wang Chuzhi contacted his son Wang Yu—who was then serving as the military prefect (团练使, Tuanlianshi) of Xin Prefecture (新州, in modern Zhangjiakou, Hebei) under Li Cunxu. He requested that Wang Yu secretly instigate an incursion by Khitan's Emperor Taizu. Wang Yu agreed, and also requested to be made his heir, and Wang Chuzhi agreed.
However, most of Wang Chuzhi's staff members were apprehensive about inducing a Khitan incursion. Further, Wang Du, who was then Wang Chuzhi's deputy military governor and who was considered his heir, was fearful of being displaced by Wang Yu. Wang Du and the secretary He Zhaoxun (和昭训) therefore plotted to arrest Wang Chuzhi. They acted after a feast that Wang Chuzhi held for Zhang's emissary to Yiwu, seizing Wang Chuzhi and put him and his wife and concubines under house arrest. Wang Du thereafter slaughtered all of Wang Chuzhi's male biological descendants at Ding Prefecture, as well as Wang Chuzhi's close associates. He claimed the title of acting military governor and reported what occurred to Li Cunxu. Li Cunxu thereafter approved of his takeover from Wang Chuzhi. (Wang Chuzhi's younger son Wang Wei (王威) did escape and flee to Khitan territory, and Wang Wei would subsequently serve under Khitan's Emperor Taizu and his son Emperor Taizong.)
In spring 922, Wang Du visited Wang Chuzhi at his mansion, apparently trying to maintain a pretense of father-son relationship. Wang Chuzhi, though unarmed, hit his chest with a fist and tried to bite off his nose, stating, "Rebellious bandit! When did I ever mistreat you?" Wang Du barely escaped from Wang Chuzhi's grasp. Shortly after, Wang Chuzhi either died in anger or was killed by Wang Du.
Personal information
• Father
• Wang Zong (王宗)
• Children
• Wang Yu (王郁)
• Wang Wei (王威)
• Adoptive Child
• Wang Du (王都), né Liu Yunlang
文献资料 | 引用次数 |
---|---|
旧唐书 | 7 |
新五代史 | 6 |
资治通鉴 | 7 |
旧五代史 | 2 |
御批历代通鉴辑览 | 2 |
契丹国志 | 2 |
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