Budashiri

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Budashiri
Empress consort of the Yuan dynasty and Khatun of Mongols
Tenure16 October 1328 – 26 February 1329
PredecessorBabukhan
SuccessorBabusha
Tenure8 September 1329 – 2 September 1332
PredecessorBabusha
SuccessorDaliyetemishi
Empress Dowager of the Yuan dynasty
Tenure2 September 1332 — 19 July 1333
PredecessorEmpress Dowager Babukhan
SuccessorEmpress Dowager Lü (in Ming)
Grand Empress Dowager of the Yuan dynasty
Tenure19 July 1333 – c. 1340
PredecessorGrand Empress Dowager Dagi
SuccessorGrand Empress Dowager Zhang (in Ming)
Bornc. 1307
Diedc. 1340
SpouseJayaatu Khan Tugh Temür
IssueAratnadara
El Tegüs
Taipingna
HouseKhongirad
FatherDiwabala
MotherSengge Ragi of Lu

Budashiri or Buddhashiri (Mongolian: ᠪᠤᠳᠢᠰᠢᠷᠢ, Budashri, Sinicized as Putashali, 卜答失里) (born c. 1307 – died c. 1340) was Empress of China and Khatun of Mongols as the wife of Jayaatu Khan Tugh Temür.[1] She acted as an interime regent and was the prominent figure of the Yuan dynasty between 1332 and 1339; she was interim regent after the death of her husband and the election of his successor in 1332-1333, and then regent during the minority of his successor in 1333-1339.

She came from the Khongirad clan.[2] Her father was Prince Consort Diwabala, Prince of Lu, and her mother was Princess Supreme Sengge Ragi of Lu.[3]

Empress of Yuan[edit]

It is uncertain when Budashiri became the wife of Tugh Temür, though she became empress in 1328 when her husband ascended the throne for the first time. In the early part of 1329, she received the imperial seal.

During her husband's reign, the empress was responsible for exiling the young Toghon Temür to Goryeo, and then to Henan. Her claim was that he was not the actual son of Khutughtu Khan Kusala (Emperor Mingzong), Tugh Temür's older brother. It was during Toghon Temür's exile that Budashiri also arranged for the execution of his stepmother, Babusha, having accused her of the coup against her late husband.

Regency[edit]

When Tugh Temür died in 1332, Budashiri acted as regent, which was in accordance with tradition and because Tugh Temür had not named a successor. It is said that on his deathbed, Tugh Temür had expressed remorse for what he had done to his elder brother, and intended to pass the throne on to his nephew Toghon Temür, his brother's eldest son. As a result, Budashiri did not appoint her own son El Tegüs to the throne, but neither did she appoint Toghon Temür; it was Kusala's second son, the six-year-old Rinchinbal, who was instead installed as emperor on 13 October 1332. This the empress did under pressure from the grand councilor, El Temür, who resisted allowing Toghon Temür to accede to the throne since he was suspected of having poisoned his father. A month after she had appointed Rinchinbal, Budashiri was granted the rank of empress dowager, and was tasked with assuming the regency. However, only two months (fifty-three days) later, the young emperor died.[4]

El Temür went on to insist that she install El Tegüs on the throne, but the empress refused, maintaining that she was still honouring the wishes of her late husband, and that El Tegüs was too young to rule. Instead, she brought back the thirteen-year-old Toghon Temür and installed him as emperor in 1333. In 1336, she was elevated to the rank of grand empress dowager.

Budashiri remained regent for over seven years, virtually ruling over the empire. However, in 1340, when the emperor grew confident that he could take control and decide matters, he began an investigation into the injustices suffered by his late father and stepmother. He also pointed out the various wrongs done to him by the grand empress dowager. As a result, in mid-1340 he ordered that Budashiri be stripped of all her titles and exiled to Dong'an Prefecture (the modern-day city of Langfang in Hebei Province), where she was swiftly put to death. In further retaliation for the difficulties he had faced while in exile, Toghon Temür also banished El Tegüs, who was killed shortly afterwards. Budashiri was about 33 years old when she died.[5]

Family[edit]

It is thought she had borne him at least three sons:

  1. Aratnadara (d. 22 February 1331)
  2. Gunadara, later renamed El Tegüs (c. 1329 – c. 1340)
  3. Baoning, later renamed Taipingna (died young)[6]

It is not known if she had any daughters.

In art[edit]

A portrait of Empress Budashiri, alongside Empress Babusha, is found on the Yamantaka-Vajrabhairava mandala. Opposite of the two empresses are portraits of Tugh Temür and Kusala.

In popular culture[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Denis Twitchett, Herbert Franke, John K. Fairbank. The Cambridge History of China.
  2. ^ Heads of State of Mongolia
  3. ^ Lily Xiao Hong Lee, Sue Wiles. Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, Volume II: Tang Through Ming 618-1644
  4. ^ Jeremiah Curtin. The Mongols: A history.
  5. ^ Lily Xiao Hong Lee, Sue Wiles. Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, Volume II: Tang Through Ming 618-1644
  6. ^ Lily Xiao Hong Lee, Sue Wiles. Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, Volume II: Tang Through Ming 618-1644

External links[edit]

Chinese royalty
Preceded by Empress of the Yuan dynasty
1328–1329
Succeeded by
Chinese royalty
Preceded by Empress of the Yuan dynasty
1329–1332
Succeeded by