Ruo (state)
State of Ruo 鄀国/鄀國 | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unknown–Unknown | |||||||||||||
Status | Viscountcy | ||||||||||||
Capital | Upper Ruo ( Lower Ruo ( | ||||||||||||
Government | viscountcy ( | ||||||||||||
Viscount | |||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||
• Established | Unknown | ||||||||||||
• Disestablished | Unknown | ||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Today part of | China |
The State of Ruò was a small vassal state during the Chinese Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE) whose rulers used the title Zǐ (
Rise and fall
[edit]The family name of the ruling house of Ruo, according to Shiben, was Yun (
Legacy
[edit]In 506 BCE, the tenth year of King Zhao of Chu, the State of Wu attacked the Chu capital Ying.[c] In the ensuing Battle of Boju, the State of Chu was almost wiped out. Later the same year Wu retreated and King Zhao returned to the capital. A year later in 507 BCE, Wu defeated Chu's navy once more raising the threat of their extermination and thus decided to move their capital from Ying to the eponymous state capital of Ruo where it would be hidden from the Wu vanguard. As the people of Chu had become used to calling their capital “Ying”, Ruo became known as “Northern Ying”.[2] At what time the capital moved back to its original location of Ying is not known. Some sources suggest that this was in 432 BCE during the reign of King Hui of Chu, making Ruo the capital of Chu for some sixty years.
Inscriptions on ancient bronze artifacts
[edit]In his research on bronze instruments discovered in the former State of Ruo, historian Guo Moruo writes[3] that amongst the inscriptions are characters for “Upper Ruo” (
In a 2001 article entitled “Introductory Explanation of the Shi Shan Pan Inscriptions”, Song Fenghan (
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Modern day Nanyang, Henan Province
- ^ South east of modern day Yicheng, Hubei Province
- ^ Modern day Jingzhou, Hubei Province
References
[edit]- ^ Commentary on the Waterways Classic Han River (沔水) Section
- ^ (Song Dynasty Reprint) Luo Mi (罗泌) (2009). Lushi (
路 史 ) (in Chinese). Beijing Library Press (北京 图书馆出版 社 ). ISBN 978-7-5013-2004-2. - ^ Guo Moruo (2002). Corpus of Inscriptions on Bronzes from the Two Zhou Dynasties (in Chinese). ISBN 978-7-03-010656-8.
- ^ Zhou Baohong (
周 宝 宏 ), Interpretations of Western Zhou Inscriptions (西 周 金文 词义研究 ),Zhejiang Cultural Artifacts Research Institute Journal, Issue 15, October 2004, p. 111 (古 文字 研究 (中国 古 文字 研究 会 、浙江 省 文物 考古 研究所 编)第 二 十 五 辑》,中 华书局 2004年 10月 ,第 111页)