Ma Ai
Ma Ai | |
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馬艾 | |
Administrator of Dunhuang Commandery (敦煌太守) | |
In office c. 215 – 220 | |
Monarchs | Emperor Xian of Han/ Cao Pi |
Preceded by | ? |
Succeeded by | Yin Feng |
Personal details | |
Born | Unknown |
Died | 219 or 220 CE Dunhuang, Liang Province |
Ma Ai (fl.215–220) was the Administrator of Dunhuang Commandery in the western Hexi Corridor during the end of the Eastern Han dynasty. His death in office destabilised the frontier and precipitated a multi-county revolt that was only quelled after Governor Su Ze intervened.
Ma Ai | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 馬艾 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 马艾 | ||||||
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Background
[edit]Little is known of Ma Ai’s origins or early career. Sometime during the final years of Emperor Xian’s reign (perhaps 215 – 218) he was appointed Administrator of Dunhuang, the western-most Han commandery and terminus of the Silk Road.[1]
Death and frontier crisis
[edit]According to the Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi) biography of Zhang Gong (張恭), Ma Ai died at his post.[2] With no time for a court replacement, Dunhuang’s elites asked Chief Clerk Zhang Gong to assume acting authority and petitioned the central government for a formal successor.
While Zhang Gong’s son travelled east to request an appointment, neighboring warlords Zhang Jin (in Zhangye Commandery) and Huang Hua (in Jiuquan Commandery) rebelled, seized their local governments and captured the messenger en route.[3]
Suppression by Su Ze
[edit]The Governor of Liang, Su Ze, marched west with allied Qiang auxiliaries, coordinated with Zhang Gong and the commandaries of Wuwei, and by mid-220 defeated the insurgents: Zhang Jin was killed in battle and Huang Hua surrendered.[4] Stability of the Hexi Corridor—vital for communications with the Western Regions—was thus restored.
Assessment
[edit]Ma Ai left no recorded achievements, but his sudden death exposed the fragility of Han control in Liang Province. Modern historians view the ensuing revolt as a prelude to the frontier administration that the Cao Wei state would formalise in 222 by creating the Wuji Colonel post at Gaochang.[1]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b de Crespigny, Rafe (2016). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms. p. 645.
- ^ Chen, Shou. "Zhang Gong zhuan". Sanguozhi. Vol. 18.
- ^ Yu Taishan (2004). "A History of the Relationship … Western Regions". Sino-Platonic Papers (131): 205–206.
- ^ Chen, Shou. "Su Ze zhuan". Sanguozhi. Vol. 16.
References
[edit]- Chen Shou (3rd c.). Sanguozhi (Records of the Three Kingdoms).
- Pei Songzhi (5th c.). Annotations to the Records of the Three Kingdoms.
- Rafe de Crespigny (2016). A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms.
- Yu Taishan (2004). “A History of the Relationship Between the Western & Eastern Han, Wei, Jin, Northern & Southern Dynasties and the Western Regions.” Sino-Platonic Papers 131.
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