Marrying daughters of the Han imperial
family to the rulers of the minority groups was one of the foreign policies of
pacification in the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-8AD). The policy had gone through
two stages. At first, Han rulers took the initiative to marry daughters of the
royal family and offer valuables of all kinds so that the Huns could stop
harassing the northern border of the empire. When Emperor Wudi was in power, it
was the Huns who proposed to Han for marriage.
In the reign of Emperor Wudi, substantial
resources were available to him as a result of his own successful policies as
well as those of his predecessors. Consequently, he was in a position to take an
active and offensive stand against threats of invasion. He sent three
expeditions led by Wei Qing and Huo Qubing against the Huns in 127BC, 121BC and
119BC respectively. By these actions, he drove them into the far north of Gobi,
thus maintaining the safety of the Hexi Corridor. The threat from the Huns was
resolved; however, they did not reach an agreement on the issue of the policy of
pacification through marriage.
During the reign of Emperor Xuandi, the Huns
was already in decline. And the ruler Huhan decided to pledge allegiance to Han
by sending his son to Han as a promise. Emperor Yuandi,
to further a good relationship between the Huns and the Han people, married Wang
Zhaojun, a beauty at that time, to the Khan. This action not only stabilized the
relationship between the Han Dynasty and the Huns, but promoted economic and
cultural exchanges between them.
Meanwhile, Han also marry daughters of royal
families to rulers of Wusun tribe for pacification. In 71BC, Han in alliance
with Wusun tribe gave the Huns a fatal defeat from which it never
recovered.
The policy of marriage for pacification was
an important policy helpful to the economic and cultural exchanges between Han
and minority groups.