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Yuan Xi

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Traditional Chinese
  
袁熙

Name
  
Yuan Xi

Parents
  
Yuan Shao

Simplified Chinese
  
袁熙

Role
  
Yuan Shao's son

Siblings
  
Yuan Tan

Pinyin
  
Yuan Xi

Died
  
207 AD, Emperor of China

Grandparents
  
Yuan Feng

Wade–Giles
  
Yuan Hsi

Spouse
  
Lady Zhen


Yuan Xi wwwkongmingnet11ipportsm215YuanXijpg

Courtesy name
  
Xianyi (显奕) or Xianyong (显雍)

Similar People
  
Yuan Shang, Yuan Shao, Yuan Tan, Lady Zhen, Cao Rui

Yuan Xi (died 207) was the second son of the warlord Yuan Shao in the late Eastern Hán dynasty.

Contents

In fiction

Yuan was described in Luo Guanzhong's historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms as "intelligent but weak and indecisive", in contrast to his older brother Yuan Tan, who was described as "brave but impulsive and violent". After the combined forces of Yuan Xi and his younger brother Yuan Shang was defeated in battle against Cao Cao in the follow-up battles after the Battle of Guandu, he fled to Liaodong with Yuan Shang and stayed with administrator Gongsun Kang, hoping to one day take over Gongsun's forces and have their revenge on Cao Cao. However, they were themselves betrayed and were killed in an ambush set up by Gongsun, who instead wanted to join Cao's forces.

Yuan Xi's wife, Lady Zhen, was taken as wife by Cao Cao's son, Cao Pi, while Yuan Xi still lived.

Descendants

Yuan Shuji, a Tang dynasty chancellor, was a descendant of Yuan Xi.

References

Yuan Xi Wikipedia