Shu Du of Cai
Shu Du of Cai | |
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Reign: | 1046 BC – 11th century |
Parents: | King Wen of Zhou (周文王) and Taisi (太姒) |
Spouse(s): | Unknown |
Issue(s): | Hu (胡) |
Ancestral name (姓): | Ji (姬) |
Given name (名): | Du (度) |
Courtesy name (字): | Unknown |
Posthumous name (謚): | Unknown |
General note: Dates given here are in the Julian calendar. They are not in the proleptic Gregorian calendar. | |
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Cai Shu Du or Shu Du of Cai (Chinese: 蔡叔度, given name Du (度), was the first ruler of the State of Cai.
Du was the fifth son of King Wen of Zhou and his wife Taisi (太姒). He had ten brothers and eight half-brothers. His elder brothers were Yi (Boyi Kao), Fa (King Wu of Zhou), Xian (Guan Shu), and Dan (the Duke of Zhou).
He was given the fief of Cai by King Wu after the overthrow of the last Shang king, Zhou. Du's realm centered on present-day Shangcai, Henan. He and his brothers Shu Xian of Guan (管叔鮮) and Shu Chu of Huo (霍叔處) were known as the Three Guards, but when King Wu died and the Duke of Zhou assumed the regency for the young King Cheng, they rebelled along with Wu Geng. The Duke of Zhou was able to suppress the rebellion and Du was exiled, although Cheng eventually recreated the realm of Cai as a grant to Du's son Ji Hu.
References
Shu Du of Cai Cadet branch of the Royal House of Zhou | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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New creation | Ruler of Cai 1046 BC – ? |
Succeeded by Cai Zhong |