Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei
Emperor Xiaowu of Northern Wei ((北)魏孝武帝) (510 – February 3, 535), personal name
Yuan Xiu (元脩 or 元修),
courtesy name Xiaoze (孝則), at times known as
Emperor Chu (出帝, "the emperor who fled"), was the last
emperor of the
Xianbei-led Chinese
Northern Wei dynasty. After the general
Gao Huan rebelled against and defeated the clan of the deceased paramount general
Erzhu Rong in 532, he made Emperor Xiaowu emperor. Despite Gao's making him emperor, however, Emperor Xiaowu tried strenuously to free himself from Gao's control, and in 534, he, aligning with the general
Yuwen Tai, formally broke with Gao. When Gao advanced south to try to again take control of the imperial government, Emperor Xiaowu fled to Yuwen's territory, leading to Northern Wei's division into two (as Gao then made
Yuan Shanjian (Emperor Xiaojing of Eastern Wei) the heir apparent, establishing
Eastern Wei). Emperor Xiaowu's relationship with Yuwen, however, soon deteriorated over Yuwen's refusal to condone his
incestuous relationships with his cousins, and around the new year 535, Yuwen poisoned him to death. Emperor Xiaowu's successor,
Yuan Baoju (Emperor Wen of Western Wei), is typically regarded, then, as the first emperor of
Western Wei, formalizing the division of the empire.
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