Hu Weiyong
Hu Weiyong | |
---|---|
Left Grand Councilor | |
In office 1377–1380 | |
Preceded by | Xu Da |
Succeeded by | Office abolished |
Right Grand Councilor | |
In office 1373–1377 | |
Preceded by | Wang Guangyang |
Succeeded by | Wang Guangyang |
Personal details | |
Born | Unknown Dingyuan County, Hao Prefecture, Anfeng Lu, Henan Jiangbei Province, Yuan dynasty |
Died | 1380 Hongwu 13 (洪武十三年) Yingtian Prefecture, Ming dynasty |
Hu Weiyong (Chinese: 胡惟庸; pinyin: Hú Wéiyōng; Wade–Giles: Hu Wei-yung; died 1380) was a Chinese official of the early Ming dynasty and a close adviser of the Hongwu Emperor. In the second half of the 1370s, he headed the civil administration of the empire. However, in 1380, he was accused of treason and executed. The subsequent purge cost the lives of tens of thousands of people.
Hu Weiyong was from
With the support of his relative,
At the end of 1379, he was removed from office and at the beginning of the following year, the deputy censor accused him of attempting to overthrow the emperor.[2] Investigators soon constructed a picture of a conspiracy led by Hu, which, with the support of part of the army, as well as the Mongols and Japanese, aimed at a coup d'état, including the assassination of the emperor.[3] He was executed on 12 February 1380, along with the Censor-in-chief Chen Ning.[3] However, the purge continued; even distant relatives of the accused, their helpers and protégés, relatives of these protégés, and so on, a total of 30,000[3] to 40,000[4] people were killed.
The fall of Hu Weiyong was accompanied by a reorganization of the highest state administration bodies. The Central Secretariat was abolished and six ministries were directly subordinated to the emperor. The Chief Military Commission, which stood at the head of the armed forces, was divided into five independent commissions, and the Censorate was reorganized.[5]
See also
References
- ISBN 0-8476-9580-8.
- ^ ISBN 90-04-10391-0.
- ^ ISBN 0-8047-1105-4.
- ^ Fairbank, John King; Goldman, Merle (2006). China: A New History. Belknap Press; Second Enlarged Edition. p. 130.
- ^ Hucker, Charles O (1958). Governmental Organization of The Ming Dynasty. Vol. 21. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 28.
Further reading
- Mu: "China's ancient political gains"
- History Cultural China : "Abolishing the Chancellery of China - A Reform of Administrative System by Zhu Yuanzhang".