Princess Xincheng
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Unknown | |
|---|---|
| Princess Xincheng | |
| Born | 634 |
| Died | 663 |
| Spouse | Zhangsun Quan Wei Zhengju |
| Father | Emperor Taizong of Tang |
| Mother | Empress Zhangsun |
Princess Xincheng (新城公主; 634–663), formerly titled Princess Hengshan, was a royal princess of the Tang dynasty. Her personal name was not recorded. She was the youngest child of Emperor Taizong of Tang and Empress Zhangsun, making her the full younger sister of Emperor Gaozong.[1][2]
Princess Xincheng was first married to Zhangsun Quan of Henan, a member of the imperial Zhangsun clan. Following his death, she remarried Wei Zhengju of Jingzhao.[1][2]
Born in 634 CE, she was the youngest daughter of Emperor Taizong and Empress Zhangsun of the Imperial Li family. Her mother’s health was already declining at the time of her birth, and she passed away in 636 CE when the princess was only two years old.
On September 23, 642 CE, she was granted the title Princess Hengshan, accompanied by a formal land enfeoffment and an increased stipend. The title was highly unconventional; according to the Six Codes of Tang, noble titles were strictly forbidden from using the names of famous mountains, great rivers, or districts near the capital. By naming her after one of China’s five sacred peaks, the Emperor deliberately broke protocol to signal his immense favor.
In 643 CE, she was betrothed to Wei Shuyu, eldest son of renowned minister Wei Zheng, but the engagement was annulled later that same year.[1][2]