When did several of Han Jingdi's sons die?

I***Fourteen sons, in order of seniority:

Longer, Liu Rong, King of Linjiang, was born in 172 BC, and was crowned in December 151 BC.

Liu Rong, King Min of Linjiang, was made crown prince in the fourth year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign before the first yuan, and was deposed four years later and made King of Linjiang in his former capacity as crown prince.

Four years into his reign, he was convicted of encroaching on the open space outside the walls of the ancestral temple to expand his palace, and the Emperor summoned him. Liu Rong was summoned and set out to worship the god of the road at the north gate of Jiangling. After getting on the car. The axle broke and the car was ruined. The fathers and mothers of Jiangling regarded this as an ominous sign and wept and whispered, "I am afraid our king will not return!" Liu Rong arrived at the capital and went to the lieutenant's residence to be interrogated. When the lieutenant chastised him, he was so afraid that he committed suicide and died. He was buried in Lantian. Tens of thousands of swallows carried earth and placed it on his grave, and the people mourned him.

Liu Rong was the oldest among the sons of Emperor Jingdi. After his death, he had no son to inherit the throne, and his fiefdom was abolished and his fiefdom was incorporated into the court as Nanxian County.

II. Liu De, King of Hezhang, was born in 171 BC and was crowned in April 155 BC.

Liu De, the king of Hezhang Xian, was appointed as the king of Hezhang in the second year of the Qianyuan reign of Emperor Xiaojing (155 BC) as an imperial son. He preferred Confucianism and followed the example of Confucian scholars in his dress and demeanor. Many Confucian students in Shandong were attached to him.

He died in the 26th year of his reign.

Three Liu Xiongyu, King of Linjiang, was born in 170 B.C., and was crowned in April 155 B.C. He was also the first king of Linjiang.

Liu Xiongyu, King of Linjiang, was crowned King of Linjiang in the second year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign. He died three years into his reign, and since there was no descendant to inherit the throne, the fief was abolished and replaced by a county.

Four Liu Yu, King of Lu, was born in 169 BC and was crowned in April 155 BC.

Liu Yu, the King of Lu Gong, was appointed as the King of Huaiyang in the second year of the first Yuan of Emperor Xiaojing's reign as a royal son. In the next year, after the defeat of the rebellion of the seven states of Wu and Chu, he was reappointed King of Lu in the third year of the first Yuan of Emperor Xiaojing's reign. He was fond of building palaces and courts and raising dogs and horses. In his later years, he preferred music, was not good at arguing and stuttered.

He died in the 26th year of his reign.

Fifth, Liu Fei, King of Jiangdu, was born in 168 B.C. and was crowned in April 155 B.C. He was a king of Jiangdu.

Liu Fei, King Yi of Jiangdu, was crowned King of Ru Nan in the second year of the first Yuan of Emperor Xiaojing's reign as a royal son. When the seven kingdoms of Wu and Chu rebelled, Liu Fei was fifteen years old, courageous and resourceful, and wrote to the Son of Heaven, volunteering to lead an army to attack Wu. Emperor Jing gave him a general's seal and ordered him to attack Wu. After Wu was defeated, he was reappointed King of Jiangdu in the next year and governed the original fiefdom of Wu, and was given the banner of the Son of Heaven for his military achievements. In the fifth year of Emperor Xiaowu's Yuanguang reign, Xiong Nu invaded the Han territory and Liu Fei wrote a letter to volunteer to attack Xiong Nu, but the Emperor did not agree to do so. Liu Fei was very proud of his ability to build palaces, and to recruit the best and the brightest from all over the world.

He died in the 26th year of his reign.

Six Liu Fa, King of Changsha, was born in 167 B.C., and was crowned in April 155 B.C. He was a king of Changsha.

Liu Fa, King of Changsha Ding, his mother, Tang Ji, was originally Cheng Ji's maid. When Emperor Jing summoned Cheng Ji, she had a menstrual period and was unwilling to serve, so he dressed up her maid, Tang'er, so that she would serve the emperor at night. The emperor was drunk and didn't know what was going on, thought it was Cheng Ji, and she was in bed with her, so she was pregnant. Only afterwards did the Emperor realize that it was not Cheng Ji. When a son was born, he was named Liu Fa. Liu Fa was appointed King of Changsha in the second year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign. Because of his mother's lowly status, she was not favored by the Emperor, so she was appointed king in a low-wet and impoverished country.

Liu Fa died in the twenty-seventh year of his reign.

VII King Liu Pengzu of Zhao, born in 166 BC, was crowned in April 155 BC.

Liu Pengzu, King of Zhao, was crowned King of Guangchuan in the second year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign. After King Sui of Zhao was defeated in a rebellion, Pengzu remained as King of Guangchuan. In the fourth year of his reign, he was renamed King of Zhao. In the fifteenth year of his reign, Emperor Xiaojing died. Peng Zu was a deceitful, treacherous and flattering person. On the surface, he was humble, respectful and pleasing to people, but on the inside, he was mean and vicious. He liked to play with the law and use sophistry to hurt people. Peng Zu had many favored concubines and descendants. If officials of the rank of minister and second-thousand-stone ministers tried to follow the laws of the Han Dynasty, they would jeopardize the king's family. For this reason, whenever a minister or an official of the rank of two-thousand-stone arrived at his office, Liu Pengzu would dress in black cloth as a servant, welcome him in person, clean the residence where the official of the rank of two-thousand-stone stayed, and set up many confusing things to attract the other party, so that once the official of the rank of two-thousand-stone made a wrong remark and violated the taboo of the court, he would write it down. If the two-thousand-stone officials wanted to follow the rule of law, he would threaten them with this; if they did not comply, he would write a letter of denunciation and falsely accuse them of committing adulterous offenses for personal gain. During Liu Pengzu's reign of more than fifty years, no minister or official of the rank of two-thousand-stone could serve for more than two years, and they were often removed from their posts because of their crimes; those who had committed big crimes were executed, and those who had committed small crimes were punished, so that none of the officials of the rank of two-thousand-stone dared to follow the rule of law. Therefore, the king of Zhao had no one who dared to follow the rule of law. Therefore, the king of Zhao was so authoritative that he sent messengers to the subordinate counties to make patent trade, and his income was more than the normal rent and tax of the kingdom. Therefore, the family of the king of Zhao had a lot of money, but all the money was used up by rewarding his concubines and sons. Liu Pengzu took as his concubine the favorite concubine of the former King Yi of Jiangdu, the same Nao Ji who was later taken by Liu Jian and raped by him, and favored her very much.

Liu Pengzu did not like building palaces and superstitious beliefs in ghosts and gods, but preferred to do what officials did. He wrote a letter to the Son of Heaven and volunteered to supervise the thieves within the kingdom. He often led the soldiers to patrol the city of Handan at night. Because of this, Liu Pengzu was not allowed to stay in Handan because of his treachery and wickedness.

Liu Dan, the crown prince of King Pengzu of Zhao, committed adultery with his daughter and sister. Liu Dan had a grudge against Jiang Chong, one of his clients, and Jiang Chong denounced Liu Dan, who was therefore deposed. Zhao was replaced by a new crown prince.

VIII Liu Duan, King of Jiao Xi, was born in 165 BC and was crowned in July 154 BC.

Liu Duan, King of Jiao Xi Yu, was appointed King of Jiao Xi as a royal son after the defeat of the rebellion of the six kingdoms of Wu and Chu in the third year of the first Yuan of Emperor Xiao Jing's reign. Liu Duan was brutal and vicious, and suffered from impotence, and when he touched a woman, he was sick for months because of it. He had a young man he favored and appointed him as a magistrate. This young official soon had sexual intercourse with the harem, and Liu Duan killed him and killed his son and mother. Liu Duan repeatedly violated the decree of the Emperor, and the officials of the Han Dynasty requested to kill him many times, but the Emperor could not bear to do so because he was his brother, so Liu Duan's behavior became even more outrageous. The officials concerned twice asked for his land to be taken away from him, so half of his fiefdom was taken away from him. Liu Duan felt hatred in his heart, so he stopped counting and managing the money in his fiefdom. All the treasuries collapsed and broke down, and the rotten property was counted in billions of dollars, which was eventually not cleaned up and organized. He also ordered the officials not to collect rent. Liu Duan also removed all the guards and closed the palace gates, leaving only one gate from which he wandered out of the palace. He repeatedly changed his name and pretended to be a commoner and went to other counties.

Whenever Liu Duan traveled to Jiaoxi to serve as a prime minister or an official of the rank of two-thousand-stone, he always found out their sins and reported them to the court if they practiced the laws of the Han Dynasty; if he couldn't find any sins, he would set up a trick and poisoned them with medicines to kill them. The methods he used to set up the trickery were so varied that he was strong enough to reject the advice of others, and clever enough to cover up his own faults. If a minister or an official of the rank of two thousand stones followed the king's law in governing, he was framed by him and was punished by the imperial court in accordance with the law. Therefore, although Jiaoxi was a small state, there were many officials of the second thousand stone rank who were killed and injured.

Liu Duan died in his forty-seventh year of reign, and finally, because he had no son to inherit the throne, his fiefdom was abolished and his fiefdom was incorporated into the court as Jiao Xi County.

Nine Liu Sheng, King of Zhongshan, was born in 164 BC and crowned in July 154 BC.

Liu Sheng, King of Zhongshan Jing, was crowned King of Zhongshan in the third year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign as an imperial son. In the fourteenth year of his reign, Emperor Xiaojing died. Liu Sheng, a man who preferred drinking and spilling and female sex, had more than 120 children and grandchildren. He often accused each other with his elder brother, the King of Zhao, saying, "The elder brother, as the king, specializes in replacing the lower officials in governing the government. Those who are kings should listen to music and enjoy songs and dances and women daily." The King of Zhao also accused him, saying, "How can the King of Zhongshan be called a vassal when he just enjoys lustful music every day and does not help the Son of Heaven to comfort the people!"

Liu Sheng died in the forty-second year of his reign.

Ten Emperor Liu Che of the Han Dynasty, born in 156 BC.

Xi Liu Yue, King of Guangchuan, was born in 155 BC and was crowned in May 148 BC.

Liu Yue, King of Guangchuan Hui, was crowned King of Guangchuan in the second year of Emperor Xiaojing's Zhongyuan reign (148 BC) as an imperial son.

Liu Yue died in the twelfth year of his reign.

Twelve Liu Send, King of Jiaodong, was born in 154 B.C. and was crowned in May 148 B.C. He was also the first king of Jiaodong.

Liu Send, King of Jiaodong Kang, was appointed King of Jiaodong in the second year of Emperor Xiaojing's Zhongyuan reign as an imperial son. He died in the twenty-eighth year of his reign. When the king of Huainan was planning a rebellion, Liu Fu secretly heard about it, so he privately made building chariots, bows and arrows, and made preparations for war and defense, waiting for the king of Huainan to start a rebellion. Later, when the officials interrogated the King of Huainan about the rebellion, the matter was revealed in his confession. Liu Fu, who was closest to the Emperor, died of an attack of guilt and grief in his heart over his involvement in the plot.

Thirteen Liu Cheng, King of Qinghe, was born in 153 BC and was crowned in April 147 BC.

Liu Hsiang, King of Qinghe, was appointed King of Qinghe as a son in the third year of Emperor Xiaojing's reign (147 BC). In the twelve years of his reign, he had no son, and his fief was abolished, and the fief was returned to the imperial court and became Qinghe County.

XIV King Liu Shun of Changshan, born in 152 BC, was crowned in May 145 BC.

Liu Shun, King of Changshan Xian, was appointed as King of Changshan in the fifth year of Emperor Xiaojing's Zhongyuan reign (145 BC) as an imperial son. Liu Shun was the youngest son of Emperor Jing's favorite, who was arrogant and lazy, and committed many lewd acts, repeatedly violating the laws and prohibitions, but the Emperor often forgave and pardoned him. He died in his thirty-second year of reign.