1. 名人和角色
  2. 历史
  3. Historical Figures (600s)

Li Zhi (Emperor Gaozong of Tang) MBTI性格类型

Li Zhi (Emperor Gaozong of Tang) MBTI性格类型 image

性格

"Li Zhi (Emperor Gaozong of Tang)是什么人格? Li Zhi (Emperor Gaozong of Tang)是MBTI中的INFP人格类型,九型中的9w1 - - 964,五大类型中的,Socionics中类型。"

I think it's useless to type leaders based on political stances and positions, and more useful to type them on leadership style, character outside of leadership, and what we know of their personal life. Li Zhi's leadership style was more based on his own feelings than anything else. He did things because he wanted to, not because of objective benefits. He gave Wu Zetian power because he trusted her. He made Wu Zetian empress simply because he wanted to, and then tried to depose her on a whim. He also wanted to spare Li Xian after he committed a treasonous act out of his relationship with him. His Ne-Si shows in him liking to do the unprecedented. A good example of his aux Ne and tert Si working together is when he wanted to give his grandson Li Chongzhao the title of 皇太孫 while his father was the 皇太子, an unprecedented move. His attitude to doing something unprecedented was that he could set a new precedent. He hoped that this would ensure the future of Tang, but it didn't work out because Li Chongzhao was one when he died and Wu Zetian had a counterphobic 6 fix.

背景

Emperor Gaozong of Tang (21 July 628 – 27 December 683), personal name Li Zhi, was the third emperor of the Tang dynasty in China, ruling from 649 to 683 (although after January 665 Imperial powers was primarily in the hands of his powerful second wife Empress Wu, later known as Wu Zetian). Emperor Gaozong was aided in his rule by Empress Wu during the later years of his reign after a series of strokes left him incapacitated. Emperor Gaozong delegated all matters of state to his Strong wife and Empress Wu is therefore unique in the annals of the Tang Empire for the political influence she wielded, and after Emperor Gaozong died in 683. power fell completely and single into the hands of Empress Wu, who subsequently became the only Empress regnant in Chinese history. After his death, he was interred at the Qianling Mausoleumalong with Wu Zetian. Historians have generally viewed Emperor Gaozong as a weak ruler, inattentive to the business of the state and leaving such business to his powerful wife Empress Wu. During the first part of his reign, Tang territorial gains, which started with his father Emperor Taizong, continued, including the conquest of Baekje, Goguryeo, and the Western Turkic Khaganate, but throughout the 670s, much of those gains were lost to the Tibetan Empire, Silla, Khitan, and Balhae. Further, territory previously conquered that belonged to both the Göktürks and the Western Turkic Khaganate were subjected to repeated rebellions.

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