Duke Gui of Qi
| Duke Gui of Qi 齊癸公 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duke of Qi | |||||
| Reign | c. 10th century BC | ||||
| Predecessor | Duke Yi | ||||
| Successor | Duke Ai | ||||
| Issue | Duke Ai Duke Hu Duke Xian | ||||
| |||||
| House | Jiang | ||||
| Dynasty | Jiang Qi | ||||
| Father | Duke Yi | ||||
Duke Gui of Qi (Chinese: 齊癸公; pinyin: Qí Guǐ Gōng), personal name Lü Cimu, was a duke of the Qi state.[1][2]
Duke Gui succeeded his father, Duke Yi, and was succeeded by one of his sons, Duke Ai.[1][2]
Family
Concubines:
- The mother of Princes Buchen and Shan
Sons:
- Prince Buchen (公子不辰; d. 890 BC), ruled as Duke Ai of Qi from 901–890 BC
- Prince Jing (公子靜; d. 859 BC), ruled as Duke Hu of Qi from 889–859 BC
- Prince Shan (公子山; d. 850 BC), ruled as Duke Xian of Qi from 858–850 BC
Ancestry
| Jiang Ziya (1128–1015 BC) | |||||||||||||||
| Duke Ding of Qi (1050–975 BC) | |||||||||||||||
| Duke Yǐ of Qi (d. 933 BC) | |||||||||||||||
| Duke Gui of Qi (d. 902 BC) | |||||||||||||||
| King Wu of Zhou D.1043 BC | |||||||||||||||
| Lady, of the Ji clan of Zhou (姬姓) | |||||||||||||||