Lu Guangchou

Lu Guangchou (盧光稠) (died 910) was a warlord late in the Chinese Tang dynasty and who nominally submitted to both the succeeding Later Liang and Later Liang's rival Wu after the end of Tang, who controlled the Qian Prefecture (虔州, in modern Ganzhou, Jiangxi) region from 885 to his death in 910.

He first captured Shao Prefecture (韶州, in modern Shaoguan, Guangdong), and he had his son Lu Yanchang take control of it.

Tan Quanbo laid an ambush for the Qinghai troops and defeated them, allowing Lu Guangchou to retain Shao.

[3] After the Tang throne was seized by the major warlord Zhu Quanzhong the military governor of Xuanwu Circuit (宣武, headquartered in modern Kaifeng, Henan) in 907, ending Tang and starting a new Later Liang with Zhu as its Emperor Taizu, the territory north of Lu's was controlled by the state of Hongnong (later also known as Wu), which did not submit to Later Liang and instead continued to maintain Tang era name, while the territory to the south was controlled by Liu Yin, then still a Later Liang vassal.

In 910, Emperor Taizu gave him the title of acting military governor of Zhennan Circuit (鎮南, headquartered in modern Nanchang, Jiangxi), which was then Hongnong territory.

Map of warlords before the end of the Tang dynasty, with the territory controlled by Lu Guangchou, and his brother Lu Guangmu