Cao Zizheng (died 218) was a son of Cao Cao, a warlord who rose to power in the late Eastern Han dynasty and laid the foundation for the state of Cao Wei in the Three Kingdoms period of China. His mother was Lady Li (李姬), a concubine of Cao Cao. She also bore Cao Cao two other sons: Cao Zicheng and Cao Zijing.[1] As his uncle Cao Shao (曹紹) had no heir, Cao Zizheng was adopted as Cao Shao's son. In 217, he was enfeoffed as the Marquis of Mei (郿侯). He died in the following year without a son to succeed him.[2]

Cao Zizheng
曹子整
Duke of Mei (郿公)
(posthumous)
SuccessorCao Fan
Marquis of Mei (郿侯)
Tenure217 – 218
BornUnknown
Died218
Names
Family name: Cao (曹)
Given name / Courtesy name: Zizheng
(子整)
Posthumous name
Duke Dai (戴公)
HouseHouse of Cao
FatherCao Cao
MotherLady Li

In 220, Cao Zizheng's half-brother Cao Pi became the first emperor of the Cao Wei state after usurping the throne from Emperor Xian, the last emperor of the Han dynasty. The following year, he honoured Cao Zizheng with the posthumous title "Duke Dai of Mei" (郿戴公), and ordered Cao Fan (曹範), a son of Cao Ju, to be Cao Zizheng's heir. In 222, Cao Pi enfeoffed Cao Fan as the Marquis of Pingshi (平氏侯), but changed his title to Marquis of Chengwu (成武侯) in the following year. In 229, Cao Pi's successor, Cao Rui, promoted Cao Fan from a marquis to a duke. Cao Fan died in 235 without a son to succeed him, and was posthumously honoured as "Duke Dao" (悼公). In 236, Cao Rui ordered Cao Chan (曹闡), Cao Fan's younger brother, to be Cao Fan's heir. Cao Chan thus became the new Duke of Mei (郿公). Throughout the reigns of the subsequent Wei emperors, the number of taxable households in Cao Chan's dukedom increased until it reached 1,800.[3]

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References

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  1. ^ (武皇帝二十五男: ... 李姬生穀城殤公子乘、郿戴公子整、靈殤公子京, ...) Sanguozhi vol. 20.
  2. ^ (郿戴公子整,奉從叔父郎中紹後。建安二十二年,封郿侯。二十三年薨。無子。) Sanguozhi vol. 20.
  3. ^ (黃初二年追進爵,謚曰戴公。以彭城王據子範奉整後。三年,封平氏侯。四年,徙封成武。太和三年,進爵為公。青龍三年薨。謚曰悼公。無後。四年,詔以範弟東安鄉公闡為郿公,奉整後。正元、景元中累增邑,并前千八百戶。) Sanguozhi vol. 20.