Empress Dowager Hu, after resumption of her regency over Emperor Xiaoming, became more and more dictatorial and lewd, allowed her lover Zheng Yan to assume great power, and while Yuan Yong and Yuan Lüe (元略) the Prince of Dongping (Yuan Xi's brother) were trusted and had high ranks, Zheng and Zheng's associate Xu Ge (徐紇) were more powerful than they were. Both her lifestyle and her ruling style elicited widespread dissatisfaction among officials and from her son. The agrarian and other revolts continued, and during these years, the more major rebels included: • Xianyu Xiuli (鮮于修禮), with his rebellion centering Ding Province (定州, roughly modern
Baoding,
Hebei. After Xianyu's death, his general
Ge Rong took over and became very strong, proclaiming himself the Emperor of Qi •
Xiao Baoyin, son of
Emperor Ming of Southern Qi, who sought to reestablish
Southern Qi, with his rebellion centering
Chang'an •
Xing Gao, with his rebellion centering
Beihai (roughly modern
Weifang,
Shandong) •
Moqi Chounu, with his rebellion centering Gaoping (高平, roughly modern
Guyuan,
Ningxia) Empress Dowager Hu sent a number of generals against these rebels without much success, and while Xiao Baoyin was defeated by his own subordinates and forced to flee to Moqi, no other major rebels were defeated by Northern Wei generals. Exacerbating the situation was that Empress Dowager Hu did not like to hear about news of rebel successes, and therefore her attendants often made up good news, causing her to often refuse generals' requests for reinforcements. Several times, Emperor Xiaoming publicly declared that he would personally lead armies against the rebels, but each time he failed to actually do so. Meanwhile, during these internal troubles that Northern Wei, Liang took advantage by capturing a number of border cities, including the important city
Shouyang. The only real military success that Northern Wei had during this time happened in late 525, when it was able to recapture Pengcheng from Liang—and the success was fortuitous, as the Liang prince Xiao Zong (蕭綜), the son of
Emperor Wu of Liang and his concubine Consort Wu, who was previously the concubine of Southern Qi emperor
Xiao Baojuan, became convinced that he was actually Xiao Baojuan's posthumous son, and surrendered to Northern Wei, causing his own army to collapse and allowing Northern Wei to reenter Pengcheng. Sometime during this second regency, Empress Dowager Hu, to further enhance her clan's prestige, married a daughter of her cousin Hu Sheng (胡盛) to Emperor Xiaoming, to be his
empress. However, Emperor Xiaoming favored his concubine Consort Pan, and Empress Hu and the other concubines did not receive much favor from him. In 528, Consort Pan bore him a
daughter. However, Empress Dowager Hu falsely declared that Consort Pan's child was a son, and ordered a general pardon. By this time, Emperor Xiaoming, aged 18, was tired of the hold that his mother had on his administration, and he further despised Zheng Yan and Xu Ge. He therefore sent secret messengers to the general
Erzhu Rong, who controlled the region around Bing Province (并州, modern central
Shanxi), ordering him to advance on Luoyang to force Empress Dowager Hu to remove Zheng and Xu. After Erzhu advanced to Shangdang (上黨, in modern
Changzhi,
Shanxi), Emperor Xiaoming suddenly changed his mind and sent messengers to stop him, but the news leaked. Zheng and Xu therefore advised Empress Dowager Hu to have Emperor Xiaoming poisoned. She did so, and after initially announcing that Emperor Xiaoming's "son" by Consort Pan would succeed him, admitted that the "son" was actually a daughter, and instead selected
Yuan Zhao the son of Yuan Baohui (元寶暉) the Prince of Lintao, two-years in age, to succeed Emperor Xiaoming. ==Death==