Jia Mi

Jia Mi
賈謐
Cavalier In Regular Attendance (散騎常侍)
In office
?–?
MonarchEmperor Hui of Jin
General of the Rear Army (後軍將軍)
In office
?–?
MonarchEmperor Hui of Jin
Custodian of the Private Library(秘書監)
In office
296 (296)  ?
MonarchEmperor Hui of Jin
Palace Attendant (侍中)
In office
?–?
MonarchEmperor Hui of Jin
Resident Instructor of the Eastern Palace (侍講東宮)
In office
299 (299)  ?
MonarchEmperor Hui of Jin
Personal details
BornUnknown
Xiangfen County, Shanxi
Died300
Luoyang, Henan
RelationsJia Nanfeng (maternal aunt)
Jia Chong (maternal grandfather)
Guo Huai (maternal grandmother)
Han Ji (paternal ancestor)
Parents
  • Han Shou (birth father)
    Jia Limin (adoptive) (father)
  • Jia Wu (mother)
OccupationPolitician
Courtesy nameChangyuan (長淵)
Changshen (長深)
Original nameHan Mi (韓謐)
PeerageDuke of Lu

Jia Mi (died 7 May 300), courtesy name Changyuan, originally named Han Mi, was a Chinese politician of the Jin dynasty. He was the grandson of the Jin minister Jia Chong and nephew of Jin's de facto ruler between 291 and 300, Jia Nanfeng. Jia Mi was trusted with state affair by his aunt throughout her regency and wielded much influence over the Jin court. He was an extravagant minister, and under him, the Jin court became increasingly corrupted. Between 299 and 300, Jia Mi pushed his aunt for the removal and later execution of the Crown Prince, Sima Yu, a decision that would lead to the Jia clan's downfall. In May 300, Jia Mi was killed during Sima Lun's coup d'état.