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Li Changyan

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Li Changyan( lý xương ngôn ) (d. 884) was a warlord of the lateChinesedynastyTang dynasty,who controlled Fengxiang Circuit ( phượng tường, headquartered in modernBaoji,Shaanxi) from 881 to 884 as its military governor (jiedushi) after overthrowing his predecessor, the former chancellorZheng Tian.

Takeover of Fengxiang Circuit

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Little is known about Li Changyan's background, as neither of the official histories of the Tang dynasty (theOld Book of Tangand theNew Book of Tang) contained a biography for him. It is known that as of 881, when Zheng Tian was serving as the military governor of Fengxiang and the overall commander against the major agrarian rebelHuang Chao—after Huang had captured the imperial capitalChang'anearlier that year and forced then-reigningEmperor Xizongto flee toChengdu—Li Changyan was serving as the commander of the Fengxiang forces ( hành quân tư mã,Xingjun Sima) and stationed at Xingping ( hưng bình, in modernXianyang,Shaanxi). Due to the indecisive nature of the warfare with Huang, who declared himself emperor of a new state of Qi, the Fengxiang treasury was becoming drained, and Zheng was giving less rewards to the soldiers than the soldiers expected and cutting down on the salaries. Li Changyan, knowing that the soldiers were displeased, fanned their discontent. In winter 881, he took his soldiers from Xingyuan back to Fengxiang's capital Fengxiang Municipality and poised to attack. Zheng, not wanting to have his forces battle each other, transferred his powers to Li Changyan and headed toward Chengdu to join Emperor Xizong, but on the way also offered to resign. Emperor Xizong gave Zheng the post of advisor to theCrown Prince—a completely honorary post since there was no crown prince at the time—while making Li Changyan military governor.[1]

As military governor

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It is unclear what role Li Changyan had in the campaign against Huang Chao. In 883, Emperor Xizong bestowed on him the honorarychancellortitle ofTong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi(Đồng trung thư môn hạ bình chương sự).[2]

Later that year, after Huang had been defeated and Tang forces recaptured Chang'an, Emperor Xizong was beginning to prepare for a return to Chang'an. At that time, Zheng was again chancellor, but was in sharp disagreement in many matters with the powerfuleunuchTian Lingziand Tian's brotherChen Jingxuanthe military governor of Xichuan Circuit ( tây xuyên, headquartered at Chengdu). In order to get Zheng to remove himself, Tian and Chen had Li Changyan submit a petition stating, "The soldiers are being troubled. When Zheng Tian follows Your Imperial Majesty back to the capital, he should not pass here." Zheng, seeing the nature of the threat, resigned.[2]

In 884, Li Changyan became seriously ill. He commissioned his brotherLi Changfuas acting military governor, and thereafter died. Emperor Xizong then commissioned Li Changfu as military governor.[3]

Notes and references

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  1. ^Zizhi Tongjian,vol. 254.
  2. ^abZizhi Tongjian,vol. 255.
  3. ^Zizhi Tongjian,vol. 256.