Sholu
Sovereignempire

Later Liang

386 CE – 403 CE

Quick Facts

Type
Sovereign · empire
Period
386 CE – 403 CE
Duration
17 years
Known Periods
3
Data Confidence
ai_generated

Overview

The Later Liang (simplified Chinese: 后凉; traditional Chinese: 後凉; pinyin: Hòu Liáng; 386–403) was a dynastic state of China and one of the Sixteen Kingdoms in Chinese history. It was founded by the Lü family of the Di ethnicity and given the prefix of "Later" in historiography to distinguish it with the Former Liang dynasty before them and the three Liang states (Southern, Northern and Western) that emerged during their collapse. All rulers of the Later Liang proclaimed themselves "Heavenly King" (Tian Wang). The state's founder, Lü Guang initially took on lesser titles before declaring himself Heavenly King of Liang in 396, and so the state was only known as "Liang" (涼) from 396 to 403. The Later Liang at.

Historical Periods

Later Liang (387–396)

387 CE – 396 CE

Area: 237,181 km²

Later Liang (397–401)

397 CE – 401 CE

Area: 86,087 km²

Later Liang (402–406)

402 CE – 406 CE

medium
Area: 84,602 km²

Explore Later Liang on the Interactive Map

Watch territories shift, borders change, and history unfold across centuries