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foreign states. Her main focus was to crush the powerful Ji (季) and Meng (孟) clans. In 575, she finally convinced her son to have them punished on the excuse of treason. He promised to do so on return from the war, but in his absence, she had her lover Shusun Qiao act against them. Their action failed and ended in a coup, during which her lover was forced to flee while she was placed in house arrest in the
Eastern Hall by the Ji and Meng clans.
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Both her spouse and her son were passive rulers, and Mu Jiang had great influence over the affairs of state during their rule, supported by her status as a member of the ruling family of Qi, on which Lu was dependent. She influenced the decisions of war and peace and participated in negotiations with
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to see if she would leave someday. While the diviner provided a positive answer, she disputed the interpretation, claiming that it did not apply to her, who " taken up evil." She was laid to rest on 27 July.
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She remained in house arrest until she died on 6 May 564 BC. According to the
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She is included in the "Biographies of
Pernicious and Depraved Women" of the
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Zuo
Tradition/Zuozhuan: Commentary on the "Spring and Autumn Annals"
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when she first moved to the
Eastern Hall, she divined by
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Durrant, Stephen; Li, Wai-yee; Schaberg, David (2016).
58:. She married Duke Xuan of Lu and became the mother of
39:; 621 BC – 6 May 564 BC), was the duchess consort of
115:(1st ed.). Seattle: University of Washington Press.
142:Lily Xiao Hong Lee, A. D. Stefanowska, Sue Wiles.
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54:She was the daughter of one of the dukes of
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43:(r. 608 – 591 BC) during the
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189:6th-century BC Chinese women
86:Biographies of Eminent women
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20:Mu Jiang
33:Chinese
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