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词条 Dugu Xin
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  1. Notes and references

{{Infobox officeholder
|name=Dugu Xin (Dugu Ruyuan)
|birth_date=503
|death_date={{death date and age|557|4|24|503}}
|birth_place=Luoyang, Northern Wei
|death_place=Chang'an, Northern Zhou
|death_cause=Forced suicide
|father=Dugu Kuzhe (獨孤庫者)
|mother=Lady Feilian (費連氏)
|spouse={{Unbulleted list|Lady Guo (郭氏)|Lady Cui (崔氏)}}
|children={{Unbulleted list|Dugu Luo (獨孤羅)|Dugu Shan (獨孤善)|Dugu Mu (獨孤穆)|Dugu Zang (獨孤藏)|Dugu Shun (獨孤順)|Dugu Tuo (獨孤陀)|Dugu Zong (獨孤宗)|Dugu Zheng (獨孤整)|Empress Dugu|Duchess Dugu|Empress Dugu Qieluo|at least 4 other daughters}}
}}{{Chinese name|Dugu}}

Dugu Xin (503[1] – 24 April 557[2]), known as Dugu Ruyuan before 540[1], was a Xianbei military general and official during the chaotic Northern and Southern Dynasties period. In 534, Dugu Xin followed Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei to the west to join the warlord Yuwen Tai, and in the ensuing years led Western Wei forces against their archnemesis, the Eastern Wei. Despite an early debacle (after which he fled to and stayed for 3 years in the southern Liang dynasty before returning to the northwest), he captured the former Northern Wei capital Luoyang from Eastern Wei in 537. He rose to high ranks under Yuwen Tai, and his eldest daughter married Yuwen Tai's son Yuwen Yu. When the Northern Zhou dynasty replaced Western Wei, Dugu Xin was created Duke of Wei (衛國公), but was soon forced by the powerful regent Yuwen Hu to commit suicide for challenging him.

Dugu Xin was described as an extremely handsome man and was fond of wearing strange clothes, he is best remembered today by his 3 daughters: it is because of their marriages that 2 sons-in-law, 1 grandson-in-law and 2 grandsons of his became emperors of 3 Chinese dynasties, all after his death. In fact, every Chinese emperor from 604 to 907 (with the exception of Wu Zetian and self-proclaimed rebels) was his descendant. During the Sui dynasty, Dugu Xin was honored as Duke Jing of Zhao (趙景公) by Emperor Wen of Sui (who married his seventh daughter Dugu Qieluo), and in 583 the empress built a temple dedicated to his memory in the capital Daxingcheng.[3] (Remains of the temple were discovered in 1997 on the campus of Xi'an Jiaotong University.[4])

Notes and references

1. ^{{harvnb|Bei Shi|loc=[https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/北史/卷061 ch. 61.]}}
2. ^{{harvnb|Zizhi Tongjian|loc=[https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/資治通鑑/卷167 ch. 167.]}}
3. ^{{harvnb|Tang Liang Jing Cheng Fang Kao|loc=[https://zh.wikisource.org/zh-hant/唐兩京城坊考/03 ch. 3.]}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://news.xjtu.edu.cn/info/1033/55317.htm|title=【校史故事365】81 交大校址上出土的唐代文物|language=zh|website=Xi'an Jiaotong University}}
  • {{cite book|title=Bei Shi (北史)|trans-title=History of the Northern Dynasties|last=Li Dashi|last2=Li Yanshou|language=zh|year=659|ref={{harvid|Bei Shi}}}}
  • {{cite book|title=Zizhi Tongjian (資治通鑑)|trans-title=Comprehensive Mirror for Aid in Government|last=Sima Guang|language=zh|year=1086|ref={{harvid|Zizhi Tongjian}}}}
  • {{cite book|title=Tang Liang Jing Cheng Fang Kao (唐兩京城坊考)|trans-title=A Survey of the Two Tang Dynasty Capitals|last=Xu Song|language=zh|year=1848|ref={{harvid|Tang Liang Jing Cheng Fang Kao}}}}
{{China-hist-stub}}

5 : 503 births|557 deaths|Western Wei|Northern Zhou generals|Forced suicides of Chinese people

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