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| family name | Ji (姬 ji) in Chinese |
| given name | Lang (閬 làng) in Chinese |
| era name | none |
| father | King Zhuang of Zhou |
| mother | unknown |
| wife | unknown |
| children | King Hui of Zhou |
| duration of reign | 676 BC- 652 BC |
| tombA tomb is a small building (or "vault") for the remains of the dead, with walls, a roof, and (if it is to be used for more than one corpse) a door. It may be partly or wholly in the ground (except for its entrance) in a cemetery, or it may be inside a chu | unknown |
| temple nameTemple names ( or less commonly Pinyin: miao hao , are commonly used when naming most Chinese and certain Korean rulers. When compared to posthumous names, the use of temple names is more exclusive. Both titles were given after death to an emperor or king | unknown |
| courtesy name | unknown |
| posthumous nameA posthumous name (/ Pinyin: shi hao; Romaji: shigo/tsuigo; Revised Romanization of Korean: siho) is a honorary name given to royalty in some cultures posthumously, that is, after the person's death. The posthumous name is commonly used when naming most C | Hui 惠 ( pinyinPinyin (, pinyin) literally means "join together sounds" (a less literal translation being "phoneticize", "spell" or "transcription") in Chinese and usually refers to Hany pinyin (, literal meaning: " Han language pinyin"), which is a system of romanizati hùi), literary meaning: "benevolent" |
| Preceded by: King Li of ZhouThe following kings Li of Zhou result from the Pinyin transliteration of the original Chinese characters. King Li of Zhou (d. 827 BC) ( ch. zhou li wang) was the tenth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty. Personal information family name Ji (姬 ji) |
Zhou Dynasty | Succeeded by: King Xiang of Zhou |