Wang Jin (eunuch)
Wang Jin | |
---|---|
王瑾 | |
Born | Chen Wu (Trần Vu) Jiaozhi Province |
Occupation | Eunuch |
Wang Jin (Chinese: 王瑾; pinyin: Wáng Jǐn; Vietnamese: Vương Cẩn) was a Ming dynasty eunuch. He was a native of Jiaozhi Province (present-day northern Vietnam), born as Chen Wu (陳蕪; Trần Vu).
During the reign of the Yongle Emperor, Zhang Fu, Duke of Ying, selected young children from Jiaozhi to enter the palace as eunuchs, and he was one of them. He served Imperial Grandson-heir Zhu Zhanji. When the Xuande Emperor ascended the throne, he became Eunuch Director of the Directorate for Imperial Accouterments (御用監太監). He was given the name Wang Jin and accompanied the emperor on a campaign against Zhu Gaoxu, Prince of Han. He participated in military affairs in all directions, receiving numerous rewards and titles. He was also given silver plaques with inscriptions such as 忠心肝膽 (zhongxin gandan), 金貂貴客 (jin diao guike), 忠誠自勵 (zhongcheng zi li), and 心跡雙清 (xinji shuang qing). Additionally, he was given two palace maids, and his adopted son, Wang Chun, was promoted. During the reign of the Jingtai Emperor, Wang Jin died.[1][2]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Zhang (1739), vol. 304.
- ^ Chen, Xuelin (2008). "Wang Jin: A Eunuch of Annamese Orgin in the Mid Ming Dynasty" (PDF). Journal of Gugong Studies. 4: 246.
Works cited
[edit]- Zhang, Tingyu (1739). Ming Shi 明史 [History of Ming].