Liu Bei 劉備, Emperor of Shu-Han

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【(涿郡涿縣)】 劉備 (玄德)

Chinese: 〔蜀漢〕昭烈皇帝 【(涿郡涿縣)】 劉備 (玄德)
Also Known As: "Xuande"
Birthdate:
Death: 223 (61-63)
Immediate Family:

Son of Liu Hong 劉弘
Husband of 麋氏; Lady Sun, 孫夫人 and 吳氏
Partner of Lady Gan 甘夫人
Father of Liu Shan 劉禪, Emperor of Shu-Han

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About Liu Bei 劉備, Emperor of Shu-Han

Liu Bei (161 – 10 June 223), courtesy name Xuande, was a warlord in the late Eastern Han dynasty who founded the state of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period and became its first ruler. Despite early failings compared to his rivals and lacking both the material resources and social status they commanded, he gathered support among disheartened Han loyalists who opposed Cao Cao, the warlord who controlled the Han central government and the figurehead Emperor Xian, and led a popular movement to restore the Han dynasty through this support. Liu Bei overcame his many defeats to carve out his own realm, which at its peak spanned present-day Sichuan, Chongqing, Guizhou, Hunan, and parts of Hubei and Gansu.

Culturally, due to the popularity of the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Liu Bei is widely known as an ideal benevolent, humane ruler who cared for his people and selected good advisers for his government. His fictional counterpart in the novel was a salutary example of a ruler who adhered to the Confucian set of moral values, such as loyalty and compassion. Historically, Liu Bei, like many Han rulers, was greatly influenced by Laozi. He was a brilliant politician and leader whose skill was a remarkable demonstration of a Legalist. Liu Bei's somewhat Confucian tendencies were also dramatized compared to his rival states' founders, Cao Pi and Sun Quan, who both ruled as pure Legalists. His political philosophy can best be described by the Chinese idiom "Confucian in appearance but Legalist in substance" (儒表法裡), a style of governing which had become the norm after the founding of the Han dynasty.