Feizi
Feizi | |||||
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Ruler of Qin | |||||
Reign | 900–858 BC | ||||
Successor | Marquis of Qin | ||||
Died | 858 BC | ||||
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House | Ying | ||||
Dynasty | Qin | ||||
Father | Daluo ( |
Feizi | |||||||||||
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Chinese | |||||||||||
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Qin Ying | |||||||||||
Chinese | |||||||||||
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Feizi[n 1] (Chinese:
Mythical origin of Qin
[edit]According to the founding myths of Qin recorded in the Records of the Grand Historian by Han dynasty historian Sima Qian, Feizi descended from the mythical Yellow Emperor and his grandson and successor Zhuanxu. Zhuanxu's granddaughter Nüxiu (
Ancestry
[edit]During the Shang dynasty, Boyi's descendant Zhongjue was in charge of Xichui (
Founding of Qin
[edit]Feizi lived in Xichui and was a skilled horse breeder.[4] King Xiao of Zhou learned of his reputation and put him in charge of breeding and training horses for the Zhou army. To reward his contributions, King Xiao wanted to make Feizi his father's legal heir instead of his half-brother Cheng. However, Marquess of Shen, Cheng's grandfather, objected and said that the Rong people would revolt if the king deposed Cheng. The king changed his mind and awarded Feizi the small fief of Qin instead (in present-day Zhangjiachuan County, Gansu), separate from his father's fief of Xichui, and gave Feizi the title Qin Ying, a combination of his fief and ancestral name.[4][5]
This was the beginning of the State of Qin that would over six centuries later conquer all other states and unify China under the rule of Qin Shi Huang, the First Emperor of the Qin dynasty.[3] At this time Qin was only a minor state classified as an "attached state" (
After death
[edit]Feizi died in 858 BC and was succeeded by his son, known as the Marquis of Qin. In 842 BC the Rong people rebelled, destroying the clan of Feizi's half-brother at Xichui. Twenty years later, Feizi's great-grandson Qin Zhong was also killed by the Rong in 822 BC. However, Qin Zhong's son and successor Duke Zhuang of Qin defeated the Rong and annexed Xichui, thus reuniting the territories of the two branches of the House of Ying.[3][4]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ p. 12.
- ^ Birks, Thomas Rawson (1878), Commentary on the Book of Isaiah, p. 247.
- ^ a b c d e Sima Qian.
秦 本 纪 [Annals of Qin]. Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). guoxue.com. Retrieved 29 April 2012. - ^ a b c d e Han, Zhaoqi (2010). "Annals of Qin". Annotated Shiji (in Chinese). Zhonghua Book Company. pp. 345–346. ISBN 978-7-101-07272-3.
- ^ Li, Feng (2006). Landscape And Power In Early China. Cambridge University Press. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-521-85272-2.