Cai Yan
Cai Yan ( 178 – post 206; or 170–215; or died 249),
courtesy name Wenji, was a Chinese composer, poet, and writer who lived during the late
Eastern Han dynasty of China. She was a daughter of
Cai Yong. Her courtesy name was originally
Zhaoji, but was changed to
Wenji during the
Jin dynasty to avoid
naming taboo because the Chinese character for ''zhao'' in her courtesy name is the same as that in the name of
Sima Zhao, the father of the Jin dynasty's founding emperor,
Sima Yan. She spent part of her life as the concubine of a powerful
Xiongnu leader until 207, when the warlord
Cao Cao, who controlled the Han central government in the
final years of the Eastern Han dynasty, paid a heavy ransom to bring her back to Han territory.
Cai Yan was celebrated for being "erudite, eloquent and brilliant in rhythm"; her biography was recorded in ''Book of the Later Han'', volume 84: Biographies of Exemplary Women (卷八十四. 列女傳. 第七十四).
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