Tianqi

emperor of Ming dynasty
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Also known as: Ming Xizong, T’ien-chi, Tianji, Xizong, Zhedi, Zhu Youjiao
Quick Facts
Wade-Giles romanization:
T’ien-ch’i
Personal name (xingming):
Zhu Youjiao
Posthumous name (shi):
Zhedi
Temple name (miaohao):
(Ming) Xizong
Born:
1605, China
Died:
1627, China (aged 22)
Also Known As:
Zhu Youjiao
Zhedi
Ming Xizong
Tianji
T’ien-chi
Xizong
Title / Office:
emperor (1620-1627), China
House / Dynasty:
Ming dynasty
Notable Family Members:
brother Chongzhen

Tianqi (born 1605, China—died 1627, China) was the reign name (niaohao) of the 16th and penultimate emperor (reigned 1620–27) of the Ming dynasty, under whose rule the infamous eunuch Wei Zhongxian (1568–1627) dominated the government while the dynasty disintegrated.

Ascending the throne at the age of 15, the Tianqi emperor preferred carpentry to governmental affairs. He handed the powers of government to Wei, a former butler in the empress dowager’s service and a friend of the young emperor’s nurse. Wei became the most powerful eunuch in Chinese history, replacing hundreds of officials and creating a network of spies. He even had temples erected in his honour throughout the country.

During this time several foreign invasions took place. The Dutch attacked and occupied the island of Taiwan, a Chinese protectorate; and the Manchu tribes, who 20 years later were to conquer all of China, were virtually unopposed in their conquest of the northeastern part of the Ming empire around the Liao River valley.

Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon in Coronation Robes or Napoleon I Emperor of France, 1804 by Baron Francois Gerard or Baron Francois-Pascal-Simon Gerard, from the Musee National, Chateau de Versailles.
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Conditions deteriorated in every part of the empire. In the northern and southwestern provinces, rebellions became endemic, and the imperial treasury was too depleted to repair the dikes when the Huang He (Yellow River) burst its banks. By the end of the Tianqi emperor’s reign the dynasty had lost control of the country, and his brother and successor, the Chongzhen emperor, was powerless to reverse the decline.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.