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Lord Changping

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Lord Changping
昌平しょうへいくん
King of Chu
In office
223 BC – 223 BC
Preceded byFuchu
Succeeded byNone
Prime Minister of Qin
In office
237 BC – 226 BC
Preceded byLü Buwei
Succeeded byNone
Personal details
Born
Family name:

Ancestral name: Mǐ (羋)
Lineage name: Xióng (くま)

Given name: Qǐ (启)
RelationsKing Qingxiang of Chu (paternal grandfather)
King Kaolie of Chu (father)
King Zhaoxiang of Qin (maternal grandfather)
King You of Chu, King Ai of Chu and Fuchu (brother)
OccupationMilitary general, monarch, politician

Lord Changping (昌平しょうへいくん; died 223 BC) was a Chinese monarch and politician who remained as an important military commander and lord of Qin, who later departed from the state of Qin and went to the state of Chu where he became the last king of Chu (223 BC) in the last days of the Chinese Warring States period.[1]

Accounts in the Records of the Grand Historian[edit]

The deeds of Lord Changping was mainly recorded in Vol. 6: Annals of Qin Shi Huang of the Records of the Grand Historian.

In 238 BC, in the State of Qin, a pseudo-eunuch Lao Ai entered into a relationship with Queen Dowager Zhao and plotted against King Zheng of Qin (who would later ascend to Shi Huang, the First Emperor):

The king found out this fact and ordered the chancellor (Lü Buwei) to let Lord Changping and Lord Changwen [zh] lead soldiers and attack Lao Ai. They battled at Xianyang (the capital of Qin) and killed hundreds [of the rebels]. [For this deed,] they all received the peerage. Also, all eunuchs who battled [against Lao Ai] received one higher peerage than before.[2]

Although Lao Ai fled from this battle, he was ultimately captured and executed.

In 226 BC, Lord Changping moved to Ying (the capital of Chu).[3]

In 224 BC, King Zheng of Qin appointed General Li Xin and his vice-commander General Meng Tian in charge of a 200,000 strong army with the task of conquering the Chu state.  After some initial success, the invasion was successfully stopped by both Lord Changping and General Xiang Yan [zh], when they managed to wipe out most of the Qin army, killing thousands, as well as some of their top commanders.  After this defeat, the Qin King put General Wang Jian in charge of a 600,000 Qin army to finally achieve the conquest of Chu.  Wang went on to capture its king (Fuchu) and capital. The remnants, however, continued to resist by adopting Lord Changping as their new king:

Xiang Yan [zh], general of Jing (another name of Chu), adopted Lord Changping as the king of Jing and resisted against Qin at Huainan. In the 24th year (223 BC), commander in chief General Wang Jian and his vice-commander General Meng Wu assaulted Chu and after some major battles they defeated the Chu army led by Lord Changping and General Xiang Yan. Lord Changping was killed by Meng Wu and Xiang Yan finally put an end to himself.[4]

In contrast, Vol. 40: House of Chu records Fuchu as the last king of Chu and does not mention Lord Changping. Furthermore, the order of events is utterly reversed compared to the accounts in Vol. 6; the army of Qin killed General Xiang Yan in 224 BC and then captured Fuchu in 223 BC.[5]

Other references[edit]

His name was not recorded but some archaeologists associate him with a prime minister Shao () of Qin.[6]

According to the modern historian Li Kaiyuan (ひらくもと), his given name was Qi (), his ancestral name Mi () and his lineage name Xiong (くま) were those of the kings of Chu. He was the son of King Kaolie of Chu. Lord Changping's three predecessors were all his brothers: King You, King Ai, and Fuchu.[7] He died from an arrow wound.[citation needed]

In popular culture[edit]

In the manga series Kingdom, he is one of the finest strategists in China and a mighty warrior as well (known under the spelling "Shou Hei Kun"), he holds the position of 'Chief of Military Affairs' acting as the 'Supreme Commander' of the entire Qin military, he's also the 'Headmaster of the Strategist Academy' (where he has taught Meng Tian [Mou Ten], Meng Yi [Mou Ki] and Heliao Diao [Karyo Ten]), initially he was one of the "Four Pillars of [Ryo]", and in the court he later became the "Chancellor of the Right", then joining with the King's faction, which resulted in the Lü Buwei's [Ryo Fui] disgrace, consequently causing the King to gain the complete dominance over the state of Qin, he's one of the key members providing assistance to king Yíng Zhèng (Ei Sei) towards the unification of China.

When he was young he was a brilliant student under Hu Shang [zh] (Ko Shou), the only pure natural strategist of the former "Qin Six Great Generals".

In Yasuhisa Hara's one shot manga written before Kingdom was serialised, he was referred as a former Qin official and prime minister, until he snapped and defected to Chu when his former homeland was going to be invaded and he cannot pass any tactics to Ying Zheng. He was killed when his former friend, a Qin general Meng Wu fought him.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Records of the Grand Historian, Vol. 6: Annals of Qin Shi Huang. [1]
  2. ^ Annals of Qin Shi Huang, the 9th year of Qin Shi Huang. おう知之ともゆきれい相國しょうこく昌平しょうへいくん昌文まさふみくんはつそつおさむ毐。せん咸陽,斬首ざんしゅすうひゃくみなはい爵,及宦しゃみなざい戰中せんちゅうまたはい爵一きゅう
  3. ^ Annals of Qin Shi Huang, the 21st year of Qin Shi Huang. 昌平しょうへいくん徙於郢。
  4. ^ Annals of Qin Shi Huang, the 23–24th year of Qin Shi Huang. 荊將こうつばめりつ昌平しょうへいくんため荊王,はんしん於淮みなみじゅうよんねんおう翦、こうむたけおさむ荊,やぶ荊軍,昌平しょうへいくんこうつばめとげ自殺じさつ
  5. ^ Records of the Grand Historian, Vol. 40: House of Chu
  6. ^ Li Kaiyuan (ひらくもと). "How could the second prime minister of Qin Shi Huang have been the last king of Chu?". Tianshui. Archived from the original on 2009-09-26.
  7. ^ Li Kaiyuan (ひらくもと). "Who was the prime minister who helped Qin Shi Huang unify the world under heavens?". LiKaiYuanBK. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14.
Lord Changping
 Died: 223 BC
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Chu
223 BC
Conquered by Qin