Cao Hua


Cao Hua was a Chinese noble woman member of the aristocrat Cao family during the Three Kingdoms period at the end of the Han dynasty. She was a daughter of the warlord Cao Cao, the King of Cao Wei. She was a noble consort of Emperor Xian. Initially, her title was Furen ; in 214, her title upgraded to Guiren.

Life

Cao Hua was elected to serve Emperor Xian of Han in 213 along with her two elder sisters, Cao Jie and Cao Xian. The three sisters entered the imperial court as consorts of Emperor Xian, in an attempt by Cao Cao to control the emperor. Cao Hua was young at the time, so she entered the imperial court later than the other two sisters. In 215, after Empress Fu Shou was assassinated for plotting against Cao Cao, he forced Emperor Xian to make Cao Jie an empress.
There are no records of Cao Hua's life as Emperor Xian's consort, but her sister Cao Jie, who became empress, resisted the coup d'état orchestrated by her half-brother, Cao Pi. The coup d'état resulted in the downfall of Emperor Xian and the eventual fall of the Han dynasty in favor of stabilization of the Cao Wei state. After the fall of the Han dynasty, Emperor Xian was demoted to a duke and Cao Jie to a duchess.
Cao Hua's fate after the fall of the Han Dynasty is unknown.

Family

Parents

Brothers

Sisters