Emperor Chong of Han was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty and the eighth emperor of the Eastern Han period. Emperor Chong was the only son of Emperor Shun. He ascended the throne at the age of one and reigned less than six months. During his reign, Empress Dowager Liang and her brother Liang Ji presided over all government affairs. While the empress dowager herself appeared to be open-minded and honest, she overly trusted her corrupt brother, and this led to corruptions and as a result the peasants suffered greatly. Emperor Chong died in 145. He was just two years old.
Family background
Then-Prince Bing was born to Emperor Shun and his concubineConsort Yu in 143. He was Emperor Shun's only son. In 144, Emperor Shun, apparently already ill, created Prince Bing crown prince. Less than four months later, Emperor Shun died, and Crown Prince Bing, at the age of one, ascended the throne as Emperor Chong.
Brief reign
As Emperor Chong was only a toddler, Emperor Shun's wife Empress Dowager Liang served as regent. She apparently was fairly diligent and open-minded in her duties, but her major fault was in trusting her corrupt and violent brother Liang Ji, who was the most powerful official in the administration. When the young and capable official Huangfu Gui submitted a report that, in circumspect language, suggested that Liang Ji and his brother Liang Buyi be humble and live more thriftly, Liang removed Huangfu from his post and tried several times to falsely accuse him of capital crimes. During Emperor Chong's reign, agrarian revolts, which were already a problem late in Emperor Shun's reign, became more serious—and even the tomb of Emperor Shun was dug up by bandits. Early in 145, Emperor Chong died. Empress Dowager Liang was initially going to keep Emperor Chong's death a secret until she would decide on who the successor would be, but she listened to the key official Li Gu and decided to properly and publicly announce Emperor Chong's death immediately. She summoned Emperor Chong's third cousins Liu Suan, the Prince of Qinghe, and Liu Zuan, the son of Liu Hong, Prince Xiao of Bohai, to the capital, and considered the two of them. Liu Suan was apparently an adult and was described as solemn and proper, and the officials largely favored him. However, Liang Ji wanted a younger emperor so that he could remain in absolute control longer, and he persuaded Empress Dowager Liang to make the seven-year-old Prince Zuan as emperor. Emperor Chong, having died in young childhood, was buried in his father's tomb complex in order to save costs. Long after Emperor Chong's death, in 175, Emperor Ling bestowed on Emperor Chong's mother Consort Yu a more elevatedimperial consort title than her original title in recognition of her status as an emperor's mother.