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Chu (state)

Chu (Chinese: , Hanyu Pinyin: Chǔ, Old Chinese: *s-r̥aʔ[2]), or Ch'u[3] in Wade–Giles romanization, was a Zhou dynasty vassal state. Their first ruler was King Wu of Chu in the early 8th century BCE. Chu was located in the south of the Zhou heartland and lasted during the Spring and Autumn period. At the end of the Warring States period it was destroyed by the Qin in 223 BCE during the Qin's wars of unification.

Chu

*s-r̥aʔ
c. 1030 BCE – 223 BCE
  Chu (楚)
c. 350 BCE
Status
  • Viscounty (before 704 BCE)
  • Kingdom (704–223 BCE)
Capital
Religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraZhou dynasty
• Founded by Xiong Yi
c. 1030 BCE 
• Xiong Tong proclaimed king
706 or 703 BCE
• Conquered by Qin
 223 BCE
CurrencyAncient Chinese coinage
Succeeded by

Also known as Jing () and Jingchu (荊楚), Chu included most of the present-day provinces of Hubei and Hunan, along with parts of Chongqing, Guizhou, Henan, Anhui, Jiangxi, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Shanghai. For more than 400 years, the Chu capital Danyang was located at the junction of the Dan and Xi Rivers[4][5] near present-day Xichuan County, Henan, but later moved to Ying. The house of Chu originally bore the ancestral temple surname Nai ( OC: /*rneːlʔ/) which was later written as Mi ( OC: /*meʔ/). They also bore the lineage name Yan ( OC: /*qlamʔ/, /*qʰɯːm/) which would later be written Xiong ( OC: /*ɢʷlɯm/).[6][7]

History edit

Founding edit

According to legends recounted in Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, the ruling family of Chu descended from the Yellow Emperor and his grandson and successor Zhuanxu. Zhuanxu's great-grandson Wuhui (吳回) was put in charge of fire by Emperor Ku and given the title Zhurong. Wuhui's son Luzhong (陸終) had six sons, all born by Caesarian section. The youngest, Jilian, adopted the ancestral surname Mi.[8] Jilian's descendant Yuxiong was the teacher of King Wen of Zhou (r. 1099–1050 BCE). After the Zhou overthrew the Shang dynasty, King Cheng (r. 1042–1021 BCE) enfeoffed Yuxiong's great-grandson Xiong Yi with the fiefdom of Chu in the Nanyang Basin and the hereditary title of (, "viscount"). Then the first capital of Chu was established at Danyang (present-day Xichuan in Henan).[8]

Western Zhou edit

In 977 BCE, during his campaign against Chu, King Zhao of Zhou's boat sank and he drowned in the Han River. After this death, Zhou ceased to expand to the south, allowing the southern tribes and Chu to cement their own autonomy much earlier than the states to the north. The Chu viscount Xiong Qu overthrew E in 863 BCE but subsequently made its capital Ezhou one of his capitals.[9] In either 703[10] or 706,[11] the ruler Xiong Tong became the ruler of Chu.

Spring and Autumn Period edit

 
A lacquerware painting from the Jingmen Tomb (Chinese: 荊門楚墓; Pinyin: Jīngmén chǔ mù, about 316 BC) of the State of Chu, depicting men wearing precursors to Hanfu (i.e. traditional silk dress) and riding in a two-horsed chariot

Under the reign of King Zhuang, Chu reached the height of its power and its ruler was considered one of the five Hegemons of the era. After a number of battles with neighboring states, sometime between 695 and 689 BCE, the Chu capital moved south-east from Danyang to Ying. Chu first consolidated its power by absorbing other states in its original area (modern Hubei), then it expanded into the north towards the North China Plain. In the summer of 648 BCE, the State of Huang was annexed by the state of Chu.[12]

The threat from Chu resulted in multiple northern alliances under the leadership of Jin. These alliances kept Chu in check, and the Chu kingdom lost their first major battle at the Chengpu in 632 BCE. During the 6th century BCE, Jin and Chu fought numerous battles over the hegemony of central plain. In 597 BCE, Jin was defeated by Chu in the battle of Bi, causing Jin's temporary inability to counter Chu's expansion. Chu strategically used the state of Zheng as its representative in the central plain area, through the means of intimidation and threats, Chu forced Zheng to ally with itself. On the other hand, Jin had to balance out Chu's influence by repeatedly allying with Lu, Wey, and Song. The tension between Chu and Jin did not loosen until the year of 579 BCE when a truce was signed between the two states.[13]

At the beginning of the sixth century BCE, Jin strengthened the state of Wu near the Yangtze delta to act as a counterweight against Chu. Wu defeated Qi and then invaded Chu in 506 BCE. Following the Battle of Boju, it occupied Chu's capital at Ying, forcing King Zhao to flee to his allies in Yun and "Sui". King Zhao eventually returned to Ying but, after another attack from Wu in 504 BCE, he temporarily moved the capital into the territory of the former state of Ruo. Chu began to strengthen Yue in modern Zhejiang to serve as allies against Wu. Yue was initially subjugated by King Fuchai of Wu until he released their king Goujian, who took revenge for his former captivity by crushing and completely annexing Wu.

Warring States period edit

Freed from its difficulties with Wu, Chu annexed Chen in 479 BCE and overran Cai to the north in 447 BCE. By the end of the 5th century BCE, the Chu government had become very corrupt and inefficient, with much of the state's treasury used primarily to pay for the royal entourage. Many officials had no meaningful task except taking money and Chu's army, while large, was of low quality.

In the late 390s BCE, King Dao of Chu made Wu Qi his chancellor. Wu's reforms began to transform Chu into an efficient and powerful state in 389 BCE, as he lowered the salaries of officials and removed useless officials. He also enacted building codes to make the capital Ying seem less barbaric. Despite Wu Qi's unpopularity among Chu's ruling class, his reforms strengthened the king and left the state very powerful until the late 4th century BCE, when Zhao and Qin were ascendant. Chu's powerful army once again became successful, defeating the states of Wei and Yue. Yue was partitioned between Chu and Qi in either 334[citation needed] or 333 BCE.[14] However, the officials of Chu wasted no time in their revenge and Wu Qi was assassinated at King Dao's funeral in 381 BCE. Prior to Wu's service in the state of Chu, Wu lived in the state of Wei, where his military analysis of the six opposing states was recorded in his magnum opus, The Book of Master Wu. Of Chu, he said:

 
Bronze from the Tomb of Chu in Xichuan County.

The Chu people are soft and weak. Their lands stretch far and wide, and the government cannot effectively administer the expanse. Their troops are weary and although their formations are well-ordered, they do not have the resources to maintain their positions for long. To defeat them, we must strike swiftly, unexpectedly and retreat quickly before they can counter-attack. This will create unease in their weary soldiers and reduce their fighting spirit. Thus, with persistence, their army can be defeated.

— Wu Qi, Wuzi

During the late Warring States period, Chu was increasingly pressured by Qin to its west, especially after Qin enacted and preserved the Legalistic reforms of Shang Yang. In 241 BCE, five of the seven major warring states–Chu, Zhao, Wei, Yan and Han–formed an alliance to fight the rising power of Qin. King Kaolie of Chu was named the leader of the alliance and Lord Chunshen the military commander. According to historian Yang Kuan, the Zhao general Pang Nuan (庞煖) was the actual commander in the battle. The allies attacked Qin at the strategic Hangu Pass but were defeated. King Kaolie blamed Lord Chunshen for the loss and began to mistrust him. Afterwards, Chu moved its capital east to Shouchun, farther away from the threat of Qin.

As Qin expanded into Chu's territory, Chu was forced to expand southwards and eastwards, absorbing local cultural influences along the way. Lu was conquered by King Kaolie in 223 BCE. By the late 4th century BCE, however, Chu's prominent status had fallen into decay. As a result of several invasions headed by Zhao and Qin, Chu was eventually completely wiped out by Qin.

Defeat edit

The Chu state was completely eradicated by the Qin dynasty.

 
Bronze bells from the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng, dated 433 BCE, State of Chu.

According to the Records of the Warring States, a debate between the Diplomat strategist Zhang Yi and the Qin general Sima Cuo led to two conclusions concerning the unification of China. Zhang Yi argued in favor of conquering Han and seizing the Mandate of Heaven from the powerless Zhou king would be wise. Sima Cuo, however, considered that the primary difficulty was not legitimacy but the strength of Qin's opponents; he argued that "conquering Shu is conquering Chu" and, "once Chu is eliminated, the country will be united".

The importance of Shu in the Sichuan Basin was its great agricultural output and its control over the upper reaches of the Yangtze River, leading directly into the Chu heartland. King Huiwen of Qin opted to support Sima Cuo. In 316 BCE, Qin invaded and conquered Shu and nearby Ba, expanding downriver in the following decades. In 278 BCE, the Qin general Bai Qi finally conquered Chu's capital at Ying. Following the fall of Ying, the Chu government moved to various locations in the east until settling in Shouchun in 241 BCE. After a massive two-year struggle, Bai Qi lured the main Zhao force of 400,000 men onto the field, surrounding them and forcing their surrender at Changping in 260 BCE. The Qin army massacred their prisoners, removing the last major obstacle to Qin dominance over the Chinese states.

By 225 BCE, only four kingdoms remained: Qin, Chu, Yan, and Qi. Chu had recovered sufficiently to mount serious resistance. Despite its size, resources, and manpower, though, Chu's corrupt government worked against it. In 224 BCE, Ying Zheng called for a meeting with his subjects to discuss his plans for the invasion of Chu. Wang Jian said that the invasion force needed to be at least 600,000 strong, while Li Xin thought that less than 200,000 men would be sufficient. Ying Zheng ordered Li Xin and Meng Wu to lead the army against Chu.[citation needed]

The Chu army, led by Xiang Yan secretly followed Li Xin's army for three days and three nights, before launching a surprise offensive and destroying Li Xin army. Upon learning of Li's defeat, Ying Zheng replaced Li with Wang Jian, putting Wang in command of the 600,000-strong army he had requested earlier and placing Meng Wu beneath him as a deputy. Worried that the Qin tyrant might fear the power he now possessed and order him executed upon some pretense, Wang Jian constantly sent messengers back to the king in order to remain in contact and reduce the king's suspicion.

Wang Jian's army passed through southern Chen (; present-day Huaiyang in Henan) and made camp at Pingyu. The Chu armies under Xiang Yan used their full strength against the camp but failed. Wang Jian ordered his troops to defend their positions firmly but avoid advancing further into Chu territory. After failing to lure the Qin army into an attack, Xiang Yan ordered a retreat; Wang Jian seized this opportunity to launch a swift assault. The Qin forces pursued the retreating Chu forces to Qinan (蕲南; northwest of present-day Qichun in Hubei) and Xiang Yan was either killed in the action or committed suicide following his defeat.[citation needed]

The next year, in 223 BCE, Qin launched another campaign and captured the Chu capital Shouchun. King Fuchu was captured and his state annexed.[15] The following year, Wang Jian and Meng Wu led the Qin army against Wuyue around the mouth of the Yangtze, capturing the descendants of the royal family of Yue.[15] These conquered territories became the Kuaiji Prefecture of the Qin Empire.

At their peak, Chu and Qin together fielded over 1,000,000 troops, more than the massive Battle of Changping between Qin and Zhao 35 years before. The excavated personal letters of two regular Qin soldiers, Hei Fu (黑夫) and Jing (), tell of a protracted campaign in Huaiyang under Wang Jian. Both soldiers wrote letters requesting supplies of clothing and money from home to sustain the long waiting campaign.[16]

Qin and Han dynasties edit

 
Spearhead from the state of Chu

The Chu populace in areas conquered by Qin openly ignored the stringent Qin laws and governance, as recorded in the excavated bamboo slips of a Qin administrator in Hubei. Chu aspired to overthrow the painful yoke of Qin rule and re-establishing a separate state. The attitude was captured in a Chinese expression about implacable hostility: "Though Chu have but three clans,[17] Qin surely be perished by none other but Chu" (楚雖三戶, 亡秦必楚).[18]

After Ying Zheng declared himself the First Emperor (Shi Huangdi) and reigned briefly, the people of Chu and its former ruling house organized the first violent insurrections against the new Qin administration. They were especially resentful of the Qin corvée; folk poems record the mournful sadness of Chu families whose men worked in the frigid north to construct the Great Wall of China.

The Dazexiang Uprising occurred in 209 BCE under the leadership of a Chu peasant, Chen Sheng, who proclaimed himself "King of Rising Chu" (Zhangchu). This uprising was crushed by the Qin army but it inspired a new wave of other rebellions. One of the leaders, Jing Ju of Chu, proclaimed himself the new king of Chu. Jing Ju was defeated by another rebel force under Xiang Liang. Xiang installed Xiong Xin, a scion of Chu's traditional royal family, on the throne of Chu under the regnal name King Huai II. In 206 BCE, after the fall of the Qin Empire, Xiang Yu, Xiang Liang's nephew, proclaimed himself the "Hegemon-King of Western Chu" and promoted King Huai II to "Emperor Yi". He subsequently had Yi assassinated. Xiang Yu then engaged with Liu Bang, another prominent anti-Qin rebel, in a long struggle for supremacy over the lands of the former Qin Empire, which became known as the Chu–Han Contention. The conflict ended in victory for Liu Bang: he proclaimed the Han dynasty and was later honored with the temple name Gaozu, while Xiang Yu committed suicide in defeat.

Liu Bang immediately enacted a more traditional and less intrusive administration than the Qin before him, made peace with the Xiongnu through heqin intermarriages, rewarded his allies with large fiefdoms, and allowed the population to rest from centuries of warfare. The core Chu territories centered in Pengcheng was granted first to general Han Xin and then to Liu Bang's brother Liu Jiao as the Kingdom of Chu. By the time of Emperor Wu of Han, the southern folk culture and aesthetics were mixed with the Han-sponsored Confucian tradition and Qin-influenced central governance to create a distinct "Chinese" culture.

Culture edit

 
Tomb guardian.
 
Drum with and Bird and Tiger Frame, Chu-state, Spring and Autumn period.
 
Lacquered yuren (羽人) figure on a toad stand

Based on the archaeological finds, Chu's culture was initially quite similar to that of the other Zhou states of the Yellow River basin. However, subsequently, Chu absorbed indigenous elements from the Baiyue lands that it conquered to the south and east, developing a blended culture compared to the northern plains.

During the Western Zhou period, the difference between the culture of Chu and the Central Plains states to the north was negligible. Only in the late Spring and Autumn Period does Chu culture begin to diverge, preserving some older aspects of the culture and developing new phenomena. It also absorbed some elements from annexed areas. The culture of Chu had significant internal diversity from locality to locality.[19] Chu, like Qin and Yan, was often described as being not as cultured by people in the Central plains. However, this image originated with the later development of Chu relative to the Central plains, and the stereotype was retrospectively cultivated by Confucian scholars in the Qin dynasty, to indirectly criticise the ruling regime, and the Han dynasty as a means of curbing their ideological opponents who were associated with such cultural practices.[20] As the founder of the Han dynasty was from the state, Chu culture would later become a basis of the culture of the later Han dynasty, along with that of the Qin dynasty's and other preceding states' from the Warring States period.[21]

Early Chu burial offerings consisted primarily of bronze vessels in the Zhou style. The bronze wares of the state of Chu also have their own characteristics. For example, the bronze Jin (altar table) unearthed from the Chu tomb in Xichuan, Henan Province are complex in shape. Dated to the mid sixth century BCE, it was one of the early confirmed lost-wax cast artifacts discovered in China proper.[22] Later Chu burials, especially during the Warring States, featured distinct burial objects, such as colorful lacquerware, iron, and silk, accompanied by a reduction in bronze vessel offerings. A common Chu motif was the vivid depiction of wildlife, mystical animals, and natural imagery, such as snakes, dragons, phoenixes, tigers, and free-flowing clouds and serpent-like beings. Some archaeologists speculate that Chu may have had cultural connections to the previous Shang dynasty, since many motifs used by Chu appeared earlier at Shang sites such as serpent-tailed gods.

Another common Chu idea was the worship of gibbons and other animals perceived to have auspicious amounts of qi.[23]

Later Chu culture was known for its affinity for shamans. The Chu culture and government supported Taoism[23] and native shamanism supplemented with some Confucian glosses on Zhou ritual. Chu people affiliated themselves with the god of fire Zhurong in Chinese mythology. For this reason, fire worshiping and red coloring were practiced by Chu people.[24]

The naturalistic and flowing art, the Songs of Chu, historical records, excavated bamboo documents such as the Guodian slips, and other artifacts reveal heavy Taoist and native folk influence in Chu culture. The disposition to a spiritual, often pleasurable and decadent lifestyle, and the confidence in the size of the Chu realm led to the inefficiency and eventual destruction of the Chu state by the ruthless Legalist state of Qin. Even though the Qin realm lacked the vast natural resources and waterways of Chu, the Qin government maximized its output under the efficient minister Shang Yang, installing a meritocracy focused solely on agricultural and military might.

Archaeological evidence shows that Chu music was annotated differently from Zhou. Chu music also showed an inclination for using different performance ensembles, as well as unique instruments. In Chu, the se was preferred over the zither, while both instruments were equally preferred in the northern Zhou states.

Chu came into frequent contact with other peoples in the south, most notably the Ba, Yue, and the Baiyue. Numerous burials and burial objects in the Ba and Yue styles have been discovered throughout the territory of Chu, co-existing with Chu-style burials and burial objects.

Some archaeological records of the Chu appear at Mawangdui. After the Han dynasty, some Confucian scholars considered Chu culture with distaste, criticizing the "lewd" music and shamanistic rituals associated with Chu culture.

 
Bronze ladle from the state of Chu

Chu artisanship includes color, especially the lacquer woodworks. Red and black pigmented lacquer were most used. Silk-weaving also attained a high level of craftsmanship, creating lightweight robes with flowing designs. These examples (as at Mawangdui) were preserved in waterlogged tombs where the lacquer did not peel off over time and in tombs sealed with coal or white clay. Chu used the calligraphic script called "Birds and Worms" style, which was borrowed by the Wu and Yue states. It has a design that embellishes the characters with motifs of animals, snakes, birds, and insects. This is another representation of the natural world and its liveliness. Chu produced broad bronze swords that were similar to Wuyue swords but not as intricate.

Chu created a riverine transport system of boats augmented by wagons. These are detailed in bronze tallies with gold inlay regarding trade along the river systems connecting with those of the Chu capital at Ying.

Linguistic influences edit

Although bronze inscriptions from the ancient state of Chu show little linguistic differences from the "Elegant Speech" (yǎyán 雅言) during the Eastern Zhou period,[25] the variety of Old Chinese spoken in Chu has long been assumed to reflect lexical borrowings and syntactical interferences from non-Sinitic substrates, which the Chu may have acquired as a result of its southern migration into what Tian Jizhou believed to be a Kra–Dai or (para-) Hmong–Mien area in southern China.[26][27] Recent excavated texts, corroborated by dialect words recorded in the Fangyan, further demonstrated substrate influences, but there are competing hypotheses on their genealogical affiliation.[28][29]

  • Aberrant early Chinese dialect, originally from the North[30]
  • Austroasiatic (Norman & Mei 1976, Boltz 1999)
  • Hmong–Mien (Erkes 1930, Long & Ma 1983, Brooks 2001, Sagart et al. 2005)[31]
  • Kra–Dai (Liu Xingge 1988, Zhengzhang Shangfang 2005)
  • Tibeto-Burman (Zhang Yongyan 1992, Zhou Jixu 2001)
  • Mixture of Austroasiatic, Hmong-Mien and Tibeto-Burman (Pullyblank 1983, Schuessler 2004 & 2007)
  • Unknown

Noticing that both 荆 Jīng and 楚 Chǔ refer to the thorny chaste tree (genus Vitex), Schuessler (2007) proposes two Austroasiatic comparanda:[32]

  • Chǔ < Old Chinese *tshraʔ is comparable to Proto-Monic *jrlaaʔ "thorn, thorny bamboo (added to names of thorny plants)", Khmu /cǝrlaʔ/, Semai /jǝrlaaʔ/, all descending from Proto-Mon-Khmer *ɟlaʔ "thorn";[33]
  • Jīng < Old Chinese *kreŋ is comparable to Khmer ជ្រាំង crĕəng “to bristle” and ប្រែង praeng “bristle”, with Chinese initial *k- possibly being a noun-forming prefix.

Bureaucracy edit

 
Pair of shamans or attendants, Chu culture, Jiangling, Hubei province, China, Warring States period, 4th-3rd century BC, wood, cinnabar, black lacquer. Portland Art Museum

The Mo'ao (莫敖) and the Lingyin (令尹) were the top government officials of Chu. Sima was the military commander of Chu's army. Lingyin, Mo'ao and Sima were the San Gong (三公) of Chu. In the Spring and Autumn period, Zuoyin (左尹) and Youyin (右尹) were added as the undersecretaries of Lingyin. Likewise, Sima (司馬) was assisted by Zuosima (左司馬) and Yousima (右司馬) respectively. Mo'ao's status was gradually lowered while Lingyin and Sima became more powerful posts in the Chu court.[34]

Ministers whose functions vary according to their titles were called Yin (). For example: Lingyin (Prime minister), Gongyin (Minister of works), and Zhenyin were all suffixed by the word "Yin".[35] Shenyin (沈尹) was the minister of religious duties or the high priest of Chu, multiple entries in Zuo Zhuan indicated their role as oracles.[36] Other Yins recorded by history were: Yuyin, Lianyin, Jiaoyin, Gongjiyin, Lingyin, Huanlie Zhi Yin (Commander of Palace guards) and Yueyin (Minister of Music). In counties and commanderies, Gong (), also known as Xianyin (minister of county) was the chief administrator.[37]

In many cases, positions in Chu's bureaucracy were hereditarily held by members of a cadet branch of Chu's royal house of Mi. Mo'ao, one of the three chancellors of Chu, was exclusively chosen from Qu () clan. During the early spring and autumn period and before the Ruo'ao rebellion, Lingyin was a position held by Ruo'aos, namely Dou () and Cheng ().[13]

Geography edit

Progenitors of Chu such as viscount Xiong Yi were said to originate from the Jing Mountains; a chain of mountains located in today's Hubei province. Rulers of Chu systematically migrated states annexed by Chu to the Jing mountains in order to control them more efficiently. East of Jing mountains are the Tu () mountains. In the north-east part of Chu are the Dabie mountains; the drainage divide of Huai river and Yangtse river. The first capital of Chu, Danyang (丹陽) was located in today's Zhijiang, Hubei province. Ying (), one of the later capitals of Chu, is known by its contemporary name Jingzhou. In Chu's northern border lies the Fangcheng mountain. Strategically, Fangcheng is an ideal defense against states of central plain. Due to its strategic value, numerous castles were built on the Fangcheng mountain.[13]

Yunmeng Ze in Jianghan Plain was an immense freshwater lake that historically existed in Chu's realm, It was crossed by Yanzi river, the northern Yunmeng was named Meng (), the southern Yunmeng was known as Yun (). The lake's body covers parts of today's Zhijiang, Jianli, Shishou, Macheng, Huanggang, and Anlu.[13]

Shaoxi Pass was an important outpost in the mountainous western border of Chu. It was located in today's Wuguan town of Danfeng County, Shaanxi. Any forces that marched from the west, mainly from Qin, to Chu's realm would have to pass Shaoxi.[13]

List of states later became part of the Chu edit

  • 863 BCE E
  • 704 BCE Quan
  • 690 BCE Luo
  • 688–680 BCE Shen
  • 684–680 BCE Xi
  • 678 BCE Deng
  • 648 BCE Huang
  • after 643 BCE Dao
  • 623 BCE Jiang
  • 622 BCE Liao
  • 622 BCE Lù ().[38]
  • after 622 BCE Ruo
  • 611 BCE Yong
  • 601 BCE Shuliao[38]
  • Sometime in the 6th century BCE Zhongli[39]
  • after 506 BCE Sui
  • 574 BCE Shuyong
  • 538 BCE Lai (賴國)
  • 512 BCE Xu
  • 479 BCE Chen
  • 445 BCE Qi
  • 447 BCE Cai
  • 431 BCE Ju
  • after 418 BCE Pi
  • About 348 BCE Zou
  • 334 BCE Yue
  • 249 BCE Lu

Rulers edit

Early rulers[8][40]
  1. Jilian (季連), married Bi Zhui (妣隹), granddaughter of Shang Dynasty king Pangeng; adopted Mi () as ancestral name
  2. Yingbo (𦀚伯) or Fuju (附沮), son of Jilian
  3. Yuxiong (鬻熊), ruled 11th century BCE: also called Xuexiong (穴熊), teacher of King Wen of Zhou
  4. Xiong Li (熊麗), ruled 11th century BCE: son of Yuxiong, first use of clan name Yan (), later written as Xiong ()
  5. Xiong Kuang (熊狂), ruled 11th century BCE: son of Xiong Li
Viscounts
  1. Xiong Yi (熊繹), ruled 11th century BCE: son of Xiong Kuang, enfeoffed by King Cheng of Zhou
  2. Xiong Ai (熊艾), ruled c. 977 BCE: son of Xiong Yi, defeated and killed King Zhao of Zhou
  3. Xiong Dan (熊䵣), ruled c. 941 BCE: son of Xiong Ai, defeated King Mu of Zhou
  4. Xiong Sheng (熊勝), son of Xiong Dan
  5. Xiong Yang (熊楊), younger brother of Xiong Sheng
  6. Xiong Qu (熊渠), son of Xiong Yang, gave the title king to his three sons
  7. Xiong Kang (熊康), son of Xiong Qu. Shiji says Xiong Kang died early without ascending the throne, but the Tsinghua Bamboo Slips recorded him as the successor of Xiong Qu.[41]
  8. Xiong Zhi (熊摯), son of Xiong Kang, abdicated due to illness[41][42]
  9. Xiong Yan (elder) (熊延), ruled ?–848 BCE: younger brother of Xiong Zhi
  10. Xiong Yong (熊勇), ruled 847–838 BCE: son of Xiong Yan
  11. Xiong Yan (younger) (熊嚴), ruled 837–828 BCE: brother of Xiong Yong
  12. Xiong Shuang (熊霜), ruled 827–822 BCE: son of Xiong Yan
  13. Xiong Xun (熊徇), ruled 821–800 BCE: youngest brother of Xiong Shuang
  14. Xiong E (熊咢), ruled 799–791 BCE: son of Xiong Xun
  15. Ruo'ao (若敖) (Xiong Yi 熊儀), ruled 790–764 BCE: son of Xiong E
  16. Xiao'ao (霄敖) (Xiong Kan 熊坎), ruled 763–758 BCE: son of Ruo'ao
  17. Fenmao (蚡冒) (Xiong Xuan 熊眴) ruled 757–741 BCE: son of Xiao'ao
Kings
  1. King Wu of Chu (楚武王) (Xiong Da 熊達), ruled 740–690 BCE: either younger brother or younger son of Fenmao, murdered son of Fenmao and usurped the throne. Declared himself first king of Chu.
  2. King Wen of Chu (楚文王) (Xiong Zi 熊貲), ruled 689–677 BCE: son of King Wu, moved the capital to Ying
  3. Du'ao (堵敖) or Zhuang'ao (莊敖) (Xiong Jian 熊艱), ruled 676–672 BCE: son of King Wen, killed by younger brother, the future King Cheng
  4. King Cheng of Chu (楚成王) (Xiong Yun 熊惲), ruled 671–626 BCE: brother of Du'ao, defeated by the state of Jin at the Battle of Chengpu. Husband to Zheng Mao. He was murdered by his son, the future King Mu
  5. King Mu of Chu (楚穆王) (Xiong Shangchen 熊商臣) ruled 625–614 BCE: son of King Cheng
  6. King Zhuang of Chu (楚莊王) (Xiong Lü 熊侶) ruled 613–591 BCE: son of King Mu. Defeated the State of Jin at the Battle of Bi, and was recognized as a Hegemon.
  7. King Gong of Chu (楚共王) (Xiong Shen 熊審) ruled 590–560 BCE: son of King Zhuang. Defeated by Jin at the Battle of Yanling.
  8. King Kang of Chu (楚康王) (Xiong Zhao 熊招) ruled 559–545 BCE: son of King Gong
  9. Jia'ao (郟敖) (Xiong Yuan 熊員) ruled 544–541 BCE: son of King Kang, murdered by his uncle, the future King Ling.
  10. King Ling of Chu (楚靈王) (Xiong Wei 熊圍, changed to Xiong Qian 熊虔) ruled 540–529 BCE: uncle of Jia'ao and younger brother of King Kang, overthrown by his younger brothers and committed suicide.
  11. Zi'ao (訾敖) (Xiong Bi 熊比) ruled 529 BCE (less than 20 days): younger brother of King Ling, committed suicide.
  12. King Ping of Chu (楚平王) (Xiong Qiji 熊弃疾, changed to Xiong Ju 熊居) ruled 528–516 BCE: younger brother of Zi'ao, tricked Zi'ao into committing suicide.
  13. King Zhao of Chu (楚昭王) (Xiong Zhen 熊珍) ruled 515–489 BCE: son of King Ping. The State of Wu captured the capital Ying and he fled to the State of Sui.
  14. King Hui of Chu (楚惠王) (Xiong Zhang 熊章) ruled 488–432 BCE: son of King Zhao. He conquered the states of Cai and Chen. The year before he died, Marquis Yi of Zeng died, so he made a commemorative bell and attended the Marquis's funeral at Suizhou.
  15. King Jian of Chu (楚簡王) (Xiong Zhong 熊中) ruled 431–408 BCE: son of King Hui
  16. King Sheng of Chu (楚聲王) (Xiong Dang 熊當) ruled 407–402 BCE: son of King Jian
  17. King Dao of Chu (楚悼王) (Xiong Yi 熊疑) ruled 401–381 BCE: son of King Sheng. He made Wu Qi chancellor and reformed the Chu government and army.
  18. King Su of Chu (楚肅王) (Xiong Zang 熊臧) ruled 380–370 BCE: son of King Dao
  19. King Xuan of Chu (楚宣王) (Xiong Liangfu 熊良夫) ruled 369–340 BCE: brother of King Su. Defeated and annexed the Zuo state around 348 BCE.
  20. King Wei of Chu (楚威王) (Xiong Shang 熊商) ruled 339–329 BCE: son of King Xuan. Defeated and partitioned the Yue state with Qi state.
  21. King Huai of Chu (楚懷王) (Xiong Huai 熊槐) ruled 328–299 BCE: son of King Wei, was tricked and held hostage by the State of Qin until death in 296 BC
  22. King Qingxiang of Chu (楚頃襄王) (Xiong Heng 熊橫) ruled 298–263 BCE: son of King Huai. As a prince, one of his elderly tutors was buried at the site of the Guodian Chu Slips in Hubei. The Chu capital of Ying was captured and sacked by Qin.
  23. King Kaolie of Chu (楚考烈王) (Xiong Yuan 熊元) ruled 262–238 BCE: son of King Qingxiang. Moved capital to Shouchun.
  24. King You of Chu (楚幽王) (Xiong Han 熊悍) ruled 237–228 BCE: son of King Kaolie.
  25. King Ai of Chu (楚哀王) (Xiong You 熊猶 or Xiong Hao 熊郝) ruled 228 BCE: brother of King You, killed by Fuchu
  26. Fuchu (楚王負芻) (熊負芻 Xiong Fuchu) ruled 227–223 BCE: brother of King Ai. Captured by Qin troops and deposed
  27. Lord Changping (昌平君) ruled 223 BCE (Chu conquered by Qin): brother of Fuchu, killed in battle against Qin
Others
  • Chen Sheng (陳勝) as King Yin of Chu (楚隱王) ruled 210–209 BCE
  • Jing Ju (景駒) as King Jia of Chu 楚假王 (Jia for fake) ruled 209–208 BCE
  • Xiong Xin (熊心) as Emperor Yi of Chu (楚義帝) (originally King Huai II 楚後懷王) ruled 208–206 BCE: grandson or great-grandson of King Huai
  • Xiang Yu (項羽) as Hegemon-King of Western Chu (西楚霸王) ruled 206–202 BCE

People edit

Astronomy edit

In traditional Chinese astronomy, Chu is represented by a star in the "Twelve States" asterism, part of the "Girl" lunar mansion in the "Black Turtle" symbol. Opinions differ, however, as to whether that star is Phi[43] or 24 Capricorni.[44] It is also represented by the star Epsilon Ophiuchi in the "Right Wall" asterism in the "Heavenly Market" enclosure.[45][46]

Biology edit

The virus taxa Chuviridae and Jingchuvirales are named after Chǔ.[47]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-07.
  2. ^ Baxter & Sagart (2014), p. 332.
  3. ^ "Chu". Encyclopedia Britannica. 3 November 2023.
  4. ^ . 合肥晚报. 2011-01-25. Archived from the original on 2011-07-11.
  5. ^ . 凤凰网. 2011-01-25. Archived from the original on 2018-09-30. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  6. ^ Theobald, Ulrich. (2018) "The Regional State of Chu 楚" in ChinaKnowledge.de - An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History, Literature and Art
  7. ^ Zhang, Zhengming. (2019) A History Of Chu (Volume 1) Honolulu: Enrich Professional Publishing. p. 46-47
  8. ^ a b c Sima Qian. . Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  9. ^ "Yu Ding: Evidence of the Extermination of the State of E during the Western Zhou Dynasty (禹鼎:西周灭鄂国的见证)" (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  10. ^ Lothar von Falkenahausen in Cambridge History of Ancient China, 1999, page 516
  11. ^ Cho-Yun Hsu in Cambridge History of Ancient China, 1999, page 556
  12. ^ "5.僖公 BOOK V. DUKE XI". The Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (in Chinese). Translated by James Legge (with modifications from Andrew Miller). Retrieved 28 March 2018. from Zuo zhuan, twelfth year of Duke Xi of Lu《左傳·僖公十二年》: "黃人恃諸侯之睦于齊也,不共楚職,曰,自郢及我,九百里,焉能害我。夏,楚滅黃。 'The people of Huang, relying on the friendship of the States with Qi, did not render the tribute which was due from them to Chu, saying "From Ying [the capital of Chu] to us is 900 li; what harm can Chu do to us?" This summer, Chu extinguished Huang."
  13. ^ a b c d e Gu, Donggao (1993). 春秋大事表. Zhonghua Book Company. pp. 940–945, 972, 1140, 2055–2066. ISBN 9787101012187.
  14. ^ Brindley (2015), p. 86.
  15. ^ a b Li and Zheng, page 188
  16. ^ "The Warring States" (in Chinese). Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  17. ^ Traditionally taken to be the Qu (), Jing (), and Zhao ().
  18. ^ Sima Qian. Records of the Grand Historian, "Biography of Xiang Yu" (項羽本紀).
  19. ^ Constance A., Cook (1999). Defining Chu : Image and Reality in Ancient China. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 3, 21–22, 32, 168. ISBN 0824818857.
  20. ^ Constance A., Cook (1999). Defining Chu: Image and Reality in Ancient China. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 1–4, 149, 151–165. ISBN 0824818857.
  21. ^ Constance A., Cook (1999). Defining Chu : Image and Reality in Ancient China. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 140–150. ISBN 0824818857.
  22. ^ Peng, Peng (2020). Metalworking in Bronze Age China: The Lost-Wax Process By Peng Peng. cambria Press. ISBN 9781604979626.
  23. ^ a b Walker, Hera S. (September 1998). "Indigenous or Foreign? A Look at the Origins of the Monkey Hero Sun Wukong" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. University of Pennsylvania. pp. 53–54.
  24. ^ Lin, Qingzhang (2008). 中國學術思想研究輯刊: 二編, Volume 6. p. 176. ISBN 9789866528071.
  25. ^ Yù, Suíshēng (1993). Liăng-Zhōu jīnwén yùnwén he xiān-Qín 'Chŭ-yīn (2 ed.). Journal of Chuxiong Teacher's College. pp. 105–109.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ LaPolla, Randy J. (2010-01-01). "Language Contact and Language Change in the History of the Sinitic Languages". Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. The Harmony of Civilization and Prosperity for All: Selected Papers of Beijing Forum(2004-2008). 2 (5): 6858–6868. doi:10.1016/j.sbspro.2010.05.036. ISSN 1877-0428.
  27. ^ Tian, Jizhou (1989). "Chuguo ji qi minzu (The country of Chu and its nationalities)". Zhongguo Minzushi Yanjiu. 2: 1–17.
  28. ^ Behr 2009.
  29. ^ Chamberlain 2016, p. 67.
  30. ^ You Rujie 1992, Dong Kun 2006 etc.
  31. ^ Ye, Xiaofeng (2014). (PDF). Minzu Yuwen. 3: 28–36. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-01-14. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  32. ^ Schuessler, Axel. 2007. An Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese. University of Hawaii Press. p. 193, 316-7
  33. ^ Shorto, H. A Mon-Khmer Comparative Dictionary, Ed. Paul Sidwell, 2006. #205. p. 115
  34. ^ 中國早期國家性質. Zhishufang Press. 2003. p. 372. ISBN 9789867938176.
  35. ^ Song, Zhiying (2012). 《左传》研究文献辑刊(全二十二册). Beijing: National Library of China publishing house. ISBN 9787501346158.
  36. ^ Tian, Chengfang (Autumn 2008). . Jianbo(简帛). Archived from the original on 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2017-09-28 – via 简帛网.
  37. ^ Hong, Gang (2012). 财政史研究. 中国财政经济出版社.
  38. ^ a b Gongyang Zhuan, Duke Wen, 6th year of, Duke Xuan, 8th year of
  39. ^ Anhui Provincial Institute (2015), p. 83.
  40. ^ See also, the Tsinghua Bamboo Slips.
  41. ^ a b Ziju (子居). (in Chinese). jianbo.org. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  42. ^ Note: Shiji calls him Xiong Zhihong (熊摯紅), and says his younger Xiong Yan killed him and usurped the throne. However, Zuo Zhuan and Guoyu both say that Xiong Zhi abdicated due to illness and was succeeded by brother Xiong Yan. Shiji also says he was the younger brother of Xiong Kang, but historians generally agree that he was the son of Xiong Kang.
  43. ^ Activities of Exhibition and Education in Astronomy. "天文教育資訊網 2011-05-22 at the Wayback Machine". 4 Jul 2006. (in Chinese)
  44. ^ Allen, Richard. "Star Names – Their Lore and Meaning: Capricornus".
  45. ^ "Richard Hinckley Allen: Star Names – Their Lore and Meaning: Ophiuchus". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  46. ^ AEEA. "天文教育資訊網 2011-05-22 at the Wayback Machine". 24 Jun 2006. (in Chinese)
  47. ^ Wolf, Yuri; Krupovic, Mart; Zhang, Yong Zhen; Maes, Piet; Dolja, Valerian; Koonin, Eugene V.; Kuhn, Jens H. . International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). Archived from the original (docx) on 13 January 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2019.

Sources edit

  • Anhui Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology and Bengbu Museum (June 2015). "The Excavation of the tomb of Bai, Lord of the Zhongli State". Chinese Archaeology. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. 14 (1): 62–85. doi:10.1515/char-2014-0008.
  • Baxter, William H.; et al. (2014), Old Chinese: A New Reconstruction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-994537-5.
  • Behr, Wolfgang (2017). "The language of the bronze inscriptions". In Shaughnessy, Edward L. (ed.). Kinship: Studies of Recently Discovered Bronze Inscritpions from Ancient China. The Chinese University Press of Hong Kong. pp. 9–32. ISBN 978-9-629-96639-3.
  • Behr, Wolfgang (2009). "Dialects, diachrony, diglossia or all three? Tomb text glimpses into the language(s) of Chǔ". TTW-3, Zürich, 26.-29.VI.2009, "Genius Loci": 1–48.
  • Brindley, Erica Fox (2015), Ancient China and the Yue: Perceptions and Identities on the Southern Frontier, c, 400 BCE–50 CE, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781107084780.
  • Chamberlain, James R. (2016). "Kra-Dai and the Proto-History of South China and Vietnam". Journal of the Siam Society. 104: 27–77.
  • Cook, Constance A.; et al., eds. (January 2004), Defining Chu: Image and Reality in Ancient China, University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 0-8248-2905-0.
  • Sima Qian, Records of the Grand Historian (《史記》).
  • So, Jenny F. (2000), Music in the Age of Confucius, Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, ISBN 0-295-97953-4.
  • Zhang Shuyi (2008), Investigation of the Pre-Qin Surname System (《先秦姓氏制度考察》) (in Chinese), Fuzhou: Fujian People's Publishing.
  • Zuo Qiuming, Zuo Zhuan (《左传》).

Further reading edit

state, this, article, about, state, during, zhou, dynasty, other, states, same, name, chinese, hanyu, pinyin, chǔ, chinese, wade, giles, romanization, zhou, dynasty, vassal, state, their, first, ruler, king, early, century, located, south, zhou, heartland, las. This article is about the state of Chu during the Zhou dynasty For other states of the same name see Chu Chu Chinese 楚 Hanyu Pinyin Chǔ Old Chinese s r aʔ 2 or Ch u 3 in Wade Giles romanization was a Zhou dynasty vassal state Their first ruler was King Wu of Chu in the early 8th century BCE Chu was located in the south of the Zhou heartland and lasted during the Spring and Autumn period At the end of the Warring States period it was destroyed by the Qin in 223 BCE during the Qin s wars of unification Chu楚 s r aʔc 1030 BCE 223 BCE Chu 楚 c 350 BCEStatusViscounty before 704 BCE Kingdom 704 223 BCE CapitalDanyang 1 丹陽 c 1030 c 680 BCE Ying c 680 278 BCE Chen 陈 278 241 BCE Shouchun 壽春 241 224 BCE PengchengReligionChinese folk religion Ancestor venerationGovernmentMonarchyHistorical eraZhou dynasty Founded by Xiong Yic 1030 BCE Xiong Tong proclaimed king706 or 703 BCE Conquered by Qin 223 BCECurrencyAncient Chinese coinageSucceeded byQin dynastyChu Chu in seal script top and regular bottom Chinese charactersChinese楚TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinChǔWade GilesCh u3IPA ʈʂʰu WuSuzhouneseTshouYue CantoneseYale RomanizationChoJyutpingCo2IPA tsʰɔː Southern MinHokkien POJChhooTai loTshooMiddle ChineseMiddle ChinesetʂʰjoOld ChineseBaxter 1992 tsrhjaʔBaxter Sagart 2014 s r aʔAlso known as Jing 荊 and Jingchu 荊楚 Chu included most of the present day provinces of Hubei and Hunan along with parts of Chongqing Guizhou Henan Anhui Jiangxi Jiangsu Zhejiang and Shanghai For more than 400 years the Chu capital Danyang was located at the junction of the Dan and Xi Rivers 4 5 near present day Xichuan County Henan but later moved to Ying The house of Chu originally bore the ancestral temple surname Nai 嬭 OC rneːlʔ which was later written as Mi 芈 OC meʔ They also bore the lineage name Yan 酓 OC qlamʔ qʰɯːm which would later be written Xiong 熊 OC ɢʷlɯm 6 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Western Zhou 1 3 Spring and Autumn Period 1 4 Warring States period 1 5 Defeat 1 6 Qin and Han dynasties 2 Culture 3 Linguistic influences 4 Bureaucracy 5 Geography 6 List of states later became part of the Chu 7 Rulers 8 People 9 Astronomy 10 Biology 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Sources 13 Further readingHistory editFounding edit According to legends recounted in Sima Qian s Records of the Grand Historian the ruling family of Chu descended from the Yellow Emperor and his grandson and successor Zhuanxu Zhuanxu s great grandson Wuhui 吳回 was put in charge of fire by Emperor Ku and given the title Zhurong Wuhui s son Luzhong 陸終 had six sons all born by Caesarian section The youngest Jilian adopted the ancestral surname Mi 8 Jilian s descendant Yuxiong was the teacher of King Wen of Zhou r 1099 1050 BCE After the Zhou overthrew the Shang dynasty King Cheng r 1042 1021 BCE enfeoffed Yuxiong s great grandson Xiong Yi with the fiefdom of Chu in the Nanyang Basin and the hereditary title of 子 zǐ viscount Then the first capital of Chu was established at Danyang present day Xichuan in Henan 8 Western Zhou edit In 977 BCE during his campaign against Chu King Zhao of Zhou s boat sank and he drowned in the Han River After this death Zhou ceased to expand to the south allowing the southern tribes and Chu to cement their own autonomy much earlier than the states to the north The Chu viscount Xiong Qu overthrew E in 863 BCE but subsequently made its capital Ezhou one of his capitals 9 In either 703 10 or 706 11 the ruler Xiong Tong became the ruler of Chu Spring and Autumn Period edit Main article Interstate relations during the Spring and Autumn period nbsp A lacquerware painting from the Jingmen Tomb Chinese 荊門楚墓 Pinyin Jingmen chǔ mu about 316 BC of the State of Chu depicting men wearing precursors to Hanfu i e traditional silk dress and riding in a two horsed chariotUnder the reign of King Zhuang Chu reached the height of its power and its ruler was considered one of the five Hegemons of the era After a number of battles with neighboring states sometime between 695 and 689 BCE the Chu capital moved south east from Danyang to Ying Chu first consolidated its power by absorbing other states in its original area modern Hubei then it expanded into the north towards the North China Plain In the summer of 648 BCE the State of Huang was annexed by the state of Chu 12 The threat from Chu resulted in multiple northern alliances under the leadership of Jin These alliances kept Chu in check and the Chu kingdom lost their first major battle at the Chengpu in 632 BCE During the 6th century BCE Jin and Chu fought numerous battles over the hegemony of central plain In 597 BCE Jin was defeated by Chu in the battle of Bi causing Jin s temporary inability to counter Chu s expansion Chu strategically used the state of Zheng as its representative in the central plain area through the means of intimidation and threats Chu forced Zheng to ally with itself On the other hand Jin had to balance out Chu s influence by repeatedly allying with Lu Wey and Song The tension between Chu and Jin did not loosen until the year of 579 BCE when a truce was signed between the two states 13 At the beginning of the sixth century BCE Jin strengthened the state of Wu near the Yangtze delta to act as a counterweight against Chu Wu defeated Qi and then invaded Chu in 506 BCE Following the Battle of Boju it occupied Chu s capital at Ying forcing King Zhao to flee to his allies in Yun and Sui King Zhao eventually returned to Ying but after another attack from Wu in 504 BCE he temporarily moved the capital into the territory of the former state of Ruo Chu began to strengthen Yue in modern Zhejiang to serve as allies against Wu Yue was initially subjugated by King Fuchai of Wu until he released their king Goujian who took revenge for his former captivity by crushing and completely annexing Wu Warring States period edit Freed from its difficulties with Wu Chu annexed Chen in 479 BCE and overran Cai to the north in 447 BCE By the end of the 5th century BCE the Chu government had become very corrupt and inefficient with much of the state s treasury used primarily to pay for the royal entourage Many officials had no meaningful task except taking money and Chu s army while large was of low quality In the late 390s BCE King Dao of Chu made Wu Qi his chancellor Wu s reforms began to transform Chu into an efficient and powerful state in 389 BCE as he lowered the salaries of officials and removed useless officials He also enacted building codes to make the capital Ying seem less barbaric Despite Wu Qi s unpopularity among Chu s ruling class his reforms strengthened the king and left the state very powerful until the late 4th century BCE when Zhao and Qin were ascendant Chu s powerful army once again became successful defeating the states of Wei and Yue Yue was partitioned between Chu and Qi in either 334 citation needed or 333 BCE 14 However the officials of Chu wasted no time in their revenge and Wu Qi was assassinated at King Dao s funeral in 381 BCE Prior to Wu s service in the state of Chu Wu lived in the state of Wei where his military analysis of the six opposing states was recorded in his magnum opus The Book of Master Wu Of Chu he said nbsp Bronze from the Tomb of Chu in Xichuan County The Chu people are soft and weak Their lands stretch far and wide and the government cannot effectively administer the expanse Their troops are weary and although their formations are well ordered they do not have the resources to maintain their positions for long To defeat them we must strike swiftly unexpectedly and retreat quickly before they can counter attack This will create unease in their weary soldiers and reduce their fighting spirit Thus with persistence their army can be defeated Wu Qi Wuzi During the late Warring States period Chu was increasingly pressured by Qin to its west especially after Qin enacted and preserved the Legalistic reforms of Shang Yang In 241 BCE five of the seven major warring states Chu Zhao Wei Yan and Han formed an alliance to fight the rising power of Qin King Kaolie of Chu was named the leader of the alliance and Lord Chunshen the military commander According to historian Yang Kuan the Zhao general Pang Nuan 庞煖 was the actual commander in the battle The allies attacked Qin at the strategic Hangu Pass but were defeated King Kaolie blamed Lord Chunshen for the loss and began to mistrust him Afterwards Chu moved its capital east to Shouchun farther away from the threat of Qin As Qin expanded into Chu s territory Chu was forced to expand southwards and eastwards absorbing local cultural influences along the way Lu was conquered by King Kaolie in 223 BCE By the late 4th century BCE however Chu s prominent status had fallen into decay As a result of several invasions headed by Zhao and Qin Chu was eventually completely wiped out by Qin Defeat edit Main article Qin s wars of unification Conquest of ChuThe Chu state was completely eradicated by the Qin dynasty nbsp Bronze bells from the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng dated 433 BCE State of Chu According to the Records of the Warring States a debate between the Diplomat strategist Zhang Yi and the Qin general Sima Cuo led to two conclusions concerning the unification of China Zhang Yi argued in favor of conquering Han and seizing the Mandate of Heaven from the powerless Zhou king would be wise Sima Cuo however considered that the primary difficulty was not legitimacy but the strength of Qin s opponents he argued that conquering Shu is conquering Chu and once Chu is eliminated the country will be united The importance of Shu in the Sichuan Basin was its great agricultural output and its control over the upper reaches of the Yangtze River leading directly into the Chu heartland King Huiwen of Qin opted to support Sima Cuo In 316 BCE Qin invaded and conquered Shu and nearby Ba expanding downriver in the following decades In 278 BCE the Qin general Bai Qi finally conquered Chu s capital at Ying Following the fall of Ying the Chu government moved to various locations in the east until settling in Shouchun in 241 BCE After a massive two year struggle Bai Qi lured the main Zhao force of 400 000 men onto the field surrounding them and forcing their surrender at Changping in 260 BCE The Qin army massacred their prisoners removing the last major obstacle to Qin dominance over the Chinese states By 225 BCE only four kingdoms remained Qin Chu Yan and Qi Chu had recovered sufficiently to mount serious resistance Despite its size resources and manpower though Chu s corrupt government worked against it In 224 BCE Ying Zheng called for a meeting with his subjects to discuss his plans for the invasion of Chu Wang Jian said that the invasion force needed to be at least 600 000 strong while Li Xin thought that less than 200 000 men would be sufficient Ying Zheng ordered Li Xin and Meng Wu to lead the army against Chu citation needed The Chu army led by Xiang Yan secretly followed Li Xin s army for three days and three nights before launching a surprise offensive and destroying Li Xin army Upon learning of Li s defeat Ying Zheng replaced Li with Wang Jian putting Wang in command of the 600 000 strong army he had requested earlier and placing Meng Wu beneath him as a deputy Worried that the Qin tyrant might fear the power he now possessed and order him executed upon some pretense Wang Jian constantly sent messengers back to the king in order to remain in contact and reduce the king s suspicion Wang Jian s army passed through southern Chen 陳 present day Huaiyang in Henan and made camp at Pingyu The Chu armies under Xiang Yan used their full strength against the camp but failed Wang Jian ordered his troops to defend their positions firmly but avoid advancing further into Chu territory After failing to lure the Qin army into an attack Xiang Yan ordered a retreat Wang Jian seized this opportunity to launch a swift assault The Qin forces pursued the retreating Chu forces to Qinan 蕲南 northwest of present day Qichun in Hubei and Xiang Yan was either killed in the action or committed suicide following his defeat citation needed The next year in 223 BCE Qin launched another campaign and captured the Chu capital Shouchun King Fuchu was captured and his state annexed 15 The following year Wang Jian and Meng Wu led the Qin army against Wuyue around the mouth of the Yangtze capturing the descendants of the royal family of Yue 15 These conquered territories became the Kuaiji Prefecture of the Qin Empire At their peak Chu and Qin together fielded over 1 000 000 troops more than the massive Battle of Changping between Qin and Zhao 35 years before The excavated personal letters of two regular Qin soldiers Hei Fu 黑夫 and Jing 惊 tell of a protracted campaign in Huaiyang under Wang Jian Both soldiers wrote letters requesting supplies of clothing and money from home to sustain the long waiting campaign 16 Qin and Han dynasties edit nbsp Spearhead from the state of ChuMain article Chu Han Contention The Chu populace in areas conquered by Qin openly ignored the stringent Qin laws and governance as recorded in the excavated bamboo slips of a Qin administrator in Hubei Chu aspired to overthrow the painful yoke of Qin rule and re establishing a separate state The attitude was captured in a Chinese expression about implacable hostility Though Chu have but three clans 17 Qin surely be perished by none other but Chu 楚雖三戶 亡秦必楚 18 After Ying Zheng declared himself the First Emperor Shi Huangdi and reigned briefly the people of Chu and its former ruling house organized the first violent insurrections against the new Qin administration They were especially resentful of the Qin corvee folk poems record the mournful sadness of Chu families whose men worked in the frigid north to construct the Great Wall of China The Dazexiang Uprising occurred in 209 BCE under the leadership of a Chu peasant Chen Sheng who proclaimed himself King of Rising Chu Zhangchu This uprising was crushed by the Qin army but it inspired a new wave of other rebellions One of the leaders Jing Ju of Chu proclaimed himself the new king of Chu Jing Ju was defeated by another rebel force under Xiang Liang Xiang installed Xiong Xin a scion of Chu s traditional royal family on the throne of Chu under the regnal name King Huai II In 206 BCE after the fall of the Qin Empire Xiang Yu Xiang Liang s nephew proclaimed himself the Hegemon King of Western Chu and promoted King Huai II to Emperor Yi He subsequently had Yi assassinated Xiang Yu then engaged with Liu Bang another prominent anti Qin rebel in a long struggle for supremacy over the lands of the former Qin Empire which became known as the Chu Han Contention The conflict ended in victory for Liu Bang he proclaimed the Han dynasty and was later honored with the temple name Gaozu while Xiang Yu committed suicide in defeat Liu Bang immediately enacted a more traditional and less intrusive administration than the Qin before him made peace with the Xiongnu through heqin intermarriages rewarded his allies with large fiefdoms and allowed the population to rest from centuries of warfare The core Chu territories centered in Pengcheng was granted first to general Han Xin and then to Liu Bang s brother Liu Jiao as the Kingdom of Chu By the time of Emperor Wu of Han the southern folk culture and aesthetics were mixed with the Han sponsored Confucian tradition and Qin influenced central governance to create a distinct Chinese culture Culture edit nbsp Tomb guardian nbsp Drum with and Bird and Tiger Frame Chu state Spring and Autumn period nbsp Lacquered yuren 羽人 figure on a toad standBased on the archaeological finds Chu s culture was initially quite similar to that of the other Zhou states of the Yellow River basin However subsequently Chu absorbed indigenous elements from the Baiyue lands that it conquered to the south and east developing a blended culture compared to the northern plains During the Western Zhou period the difference between the culture of Chu and the Central Plains states to the north was negligible Only in the late Spring and Autumn Period does Chu culture begin to diverge preserving some older aspects of the culture and developing new phenomena It also absorbed some elements from annexed areas The culture of Chu had significant internal diversity from locality to locality 19 Chu like Qin and Yan was often described as being not as cultured by people in the Central plains However this image originated with the later development of Chu relative to the Central plains and the stereotype was retrospectively cultivated by Confucian scholars in the Qin dynasty to indirectly criticise the ruling regime and the Han dynasty as a means of curbing their ideological opponents who were associated with such cultural practices 20 As the founder of the Han dynasty was from the state Chu culture would later become a basis of the culture of the later Han dynasty along with that of the Qin dynasty s and other preceding states from the Warring States period 21 Early Chu burial offerings consisted primarily of bronze vessels in the Zhou style The bronze wares of the state of Chu also have their own characteristics For example the bronze Jin altar table unearthed from the Chu tomb in Xichuan Henan Province are complex in shape Dated to the mid sixth century BCE it was one of the early confirmed lost wax cast artifacts discovered in China proper 22 Later Chu burials especially during the Warring States featured distinct burial objects such as colorful lacquerware iron and silk accompanied by a reduction in bronze vessel offerings A common Chu motif was the vivid depiction of wildlife mystical animals and natural imagery such as snakes dragons phoenixes tigers and free flowing clouds and serpent like beings Some archaeologists speculate that Chu may have had cultural connections to the previous Shang dynasty since many motifs used by Chu appeared earlier at Shang sites such as serpent tailed gods Another common Chu idea was the worship of gibbons and other animals perceived to have auspicious amounts of qi 23 Later Chu culture was known for its affinity for shamans The Chu culture and government supported Taoism 23 and native shamanism supplemented with some Confucian glosses on Zhou ritual Chu people affiliated themselves with the god of fire Zhurong in Chinese mythology For this reason fire worshiping and red coloring were practiced by Chu people 24 The naturalistic and flowing art the Songs of Chu historical records excavated bamboo documents such as the Guodian slips and other artifacts reveal heavy Taoist and native folk influence in Chu culture The disposition to a spiritual often pleasurable and decadent lifestyle and the confidence in the size of the Chu realm led to the inefficiency and eventual destruction of the Chu state by the ruthless Legalist state of Qin Even though the Qin realm lacked the vast natural resources and waterways of Chu the Qin government maximized its output under the efficient minister Shang Yang installing a meritocracy focused solely on agricultural and military might Archaeological evidence shows that Chu music was annotated differently from Zhou Chu music also showed an inclination for using different performance ensembles as well as unique instruments In Chu the se was preferred over the zither while both instruments were equally preferred in the northern Zhou states Chu came into frequent contact with other peoples in the south most notably the Ba Yue and the Baiyue Numerous burials and burial objects in the Ba and Yue styles have been discovered throughout the territory of Chu co existing with Chu style burials and burial objects Some archaeological records of the Chu appear at Mawangdui After the Han dynasty some Confucian scholars considered Chu culture with distaste criticizing the lewd music and shamanistic rituals associated with Chu culture nbsp Bronze ladle from the state of ChuChu artisanship includes color especially the lacquer woodworks Red and black pigmented lacquer were most used Silk weaving also attained a high level of craftsmanship creating lightweight robes with flowing designs These examples as at Mawangdui were preserved in waterlogged tombs where the lacquer did not peel off over time and in tombs sealed with coal or white clay Chu used the calligraphic script called Birds and Worms style which was borrowed by the Wu and Yue states It has a design that embellishes the characters with motifs of animals snakes birds and insects This is another representation of the natural world and its liveliness Chu produced broad bronze swords that were similar to Wuyue swords but not as intricate Chu created a riverine transport system of boats augmented by wagons These are detailed in bronze tallies with gold inlay regarding trade along the river systems connecting with those of the Chu capital at Ying Linguistic influences editAlthough bronze inscriptions from the ancient state of Chu show little linguistic differences from the Elegant Speech yǎyan 雅言 during the Eastern Zhou period 25 the variety of Old Chinese spoken in Chu has long been assumed to reflect lexical borrowings and syntactical interferences from non Sinitic substrates which the Chu may have acquired as a result of its southern migration into what Tian Jizhou believed to be a Kra Dai or para Hmong Mien area in southern China 26 27 Recent excavated texts corroborated by dialect words recorded in the Fangyan further demonstrated substrate influences but there are competing hypotheses on their genealogical affiliation 28 29 Aberrant early Chinese dialect originally from the North 30 Austroasiatic Norman amp Mei 1976 Boltz 1999 Hmong Mien Erkes 1930 Long amp Ma 1983 Brooks 2001 Sagart et al 2005 31 Kra Dai Liu Xingge 1988 Zhengzhang Shangfang 2005 Tibeto Burman Zhang Yongyan 1992 Zhou Jixu 2001 Mixture of Austroasiatic Hmong Mien and Tibeto Burman Pullyblank 1983 Schuessler 2004 amp 2007 UnknownNoticing that both 荆 Jing and 楚 Chǔ refer to the thorny chaste tree genus Vitex Schuessler 2007 proposes two Austroasiatic comparanda 32 楚 Chǔ lt Old Chinese tshraʔ is comparable to Proto Monic jrlaaʔ thorn thorny bamboo added to names of thorny plants Khmu cǝrlaʔ Semai jǝrlaaʔ all descending from Proto Mon Khmer ɟlaʔ thorn 33 荆 Jing lt Old Chinese kreŋ is comparable to Khmer ជ រ ង crĕeng to bristle and ប រ ង praeng bristle with Chinese initial k possibly being a noun forming prefix Bureaucracy edit nbsp Pair of shamans or attendants Chu culture Jiangling Hubei province China Warring States period 4th 3rd century BC wood cinnabar black lacquer Portland Art MuseumThe Mo ao 莫敖 and the Lingyin 令尹 were the top government officials of Chu Sima was the military commander of Chu s army Lingyin Mo ao and Sima were the San Gong 三公 of Chu In the Spring and Autumn period Zuoyin 左尹 and Youyin 右尹 were added as the undersecretaries of Lingyin Likewise Sima 司馬 was assisted by Zuosima 左司馬 and Yousima 右司馬 respectively Mo ao s status was gradually lowered while Lingyin and Sima became more powerful posts in the Chu court 34 Ministers whose functions vary according to their titles were called Yin 尹 For example Lingyin Prime minister Gongyin Minister of works and Zhenyin were all suffixed by the word Yin 35 Shenyin 沈尹 was the minister of religious duties or the high priest of Chu multiple entries in Zuo Zhuan indicated their role as oracles 36 Other Yins recorded by history were Yuyin Lianyin Jiaoyin Gongjiyin Lingyin Huanlie Zhi Yin Commander of Palace guards and Yueyin Minister of Music In counties and commanderies Gong 公 also known as Xianyin minister of county was the chief administrator 37 In many cases positions in Chu s bureaucracy were hereditarily held by members of a cadet branch of Chu s royal house of Mi Mo ao one of the three chancellors of Chu was exclusively chosen from Qu 屈 clan During the early spring and autumn period and before the Ruo ao rebellion Lingyin was a position held by Ruo aos namely Dou 鬭 and Cheng 成 13 Geography editProgenitors of Chu such as viscount Xiong Yi were said to originate from the Jing Mountains a chain of mountains located in today s Hubei province Rulers of Chu systematically migrated states annexed by Chu to the Jing mountains in order to control them more efficiently East of Jing mountains are the Tu 塗 mountains In the north east part of Chu are the Dabie mountains the drainage divide of Huai river and Yangtse river The first capital of Chu Danyang 丹陽 was located in today s Zhijiang Hubei province Ying 郢 one of the later capitals of Chu is known by its contemporary name Jingzhou In Chu s northern border lies the Fangcheng mountain Strategically Fangcheng is an ideal defense against states of central plain Due to its strategic value numerous castles were built on the Fangcheng mountain 13 Yunmeng Ze in Jianghan Plain was an immense freshwater lake that historically existed in Chu s realm It was crossed by Yanzi river the northern Yunmeng was named Meng 夢 the southern Yunmeng was known as Yun 雲 The lake s body covers parts of today s Zhijiang Jianli Shishou Macheng Huanggang and Anlu 13 Shaoxi Pass was an important outpost in the mountainous western border of Chu It was located in today s Wuguan town of Danfeng County Shaanxi Any forces that marched from the west mainly from Qin to Chu s realm would have to pass Shaoxi 13 List of states later became part of the Chu edit863 BCE E 704 BCE Quan 690 BCE Luo 688 680 BCE Shen 684 680 BCE Xi 678 BCE Deng 648 BCE Huang after 643 BCE Dao 623 BCE Jiang 622 BCE Liao 622 BCE Lu 六 38 after 622 BCE Ruo 611 BCE Yong 601 BCE Shuliao 38 Sometime in the 6th century BCE Zhongli 39 after 506 BCE Sui 574 BCE Shuyong 538 BCE Lai 賴國 512 BCE Xu 479 BCE Chen 445 BCE Qi 447 BCE Cai 431 BCE Ju after 418 BCE Pi About 348 BCE Zou 334 BCE Yue 249 BCE LuRulers editSee also Rulers of Chu family tree Early rulers 8 40 Jilian 季連 married Bi Zhui 妣隹 granddaughter of Shang Dynasty king Pangeng adopted Mi 芈 as ancestral name Yingbo 𦀚伯 or Fuju 附沮 son of Jilian Yuxiong 鬻熊 ruled 11th century BCE also called Xuexiong 穴熊 teacher of King Wen of Zhou Xiong Li 熊麗 ruled 11th century BCE son of Yuxiong first use of clan name Yan 酓 later written as Xiong 熊 Xiong Kuang 熊狂 ruled 11th century BCE son of Xiong LiViscountsXiong Yi 熊繹 ruled 11th century BCE son of Xiong Kuang enfeoffed by King Cheng of Zhou Xiong Ai 熊艾 ruled c 977 BCE son of Xiong Yi defeated and killed King Zhao of Zhou Xiong Dan 熊䵣 ruled c 941 BCE son of Xiong Ai defeated King Mu of Zhou Xiong Sheng 熊勝 son of Xiong Dan Xiong Yang 熊楊 younger brother of Xiong Sheng Xiong Qu 熊渠 son of Xiong Yang gave the title king to his three sons Xiong Kang 熊康 son of Xiong Qu Shiji says Xiong Kang died early without ascending the throne but the Tsinghua Bamboo Slips recorded him as the successor of Xiong Qu 41 Xiong Zhi 熊摯 son of Xiong Kang abdicated due to illness 41 42 Xiong Yan elder 熊延 ruled 848 BCE younger brother of Xiong Zhi Xiong Yong 熊勇 ruled 847 838 BCE son of Xiong Yan Xiong Yan younger 熊嚴 ruled 837 828 BCE brother of Xiong Yong Xiong Shuang 熊霜 ruled 827 822 BCE son of Xiong Yan Xiong Xun 熊徇 ruled 821 800 BCE youngest brother of Xiong Shuang Xiong E 熊咢 ruled 799 791 BCE son of Xiong Xun Ruo ao 若敖 Xiong Yi 熊儀 ruled 790 764 BCE son of Xiong E Xiao ao 霄敖 Xiong Kan 熊坎 ruled 763 758 BCE son of Ruo ao Fenmao 蚡冒 Xiong Xuan 熊眴 ruled 757 741 BCE son of Xiao aoKingsKing Wu of Chu 楚武王 Xiong Da 熊達 ruled 740 690 BCE either younger brother or younger son of Fenmao murdered son of Fenmao and usurped the throne Declared himself first king of Chu King Wen of Chu 楚文王 Xiong Zi 熊貲 ruled 689 677 BCE son of King Wu moved the capital to Ying Du ao 堵敖 or Zhuang ao 莊敖 Xiong Jian 熊艱 ruled 676 672 BCE son of King Wen killed by younger brother the future King Cheng King Cheng of Chu 楚成王 Xiong Yun 熊惲 ruled 671 626 BCE brother of Du ao defeated by the state of Jin at the Battle of Chengpu Husband to Zheng Mao He was murdered by his son the future King Mu King Mu of Chu 楚穆王 Xiong Shangchen 熊商臣 ruled 625 614 BCE son of King Cheng King Zhuang of Chu 楚莊王 Xiong Lu 熊侶 ruled 613 591 BCE son of King Mu Defeated the State of Jin at the Battle of Bi and was recognized as a Hegemon King Gong of Chu 楚共王 Xiong Shen 熊審 ruled 590 560 BCE son of King Zhuang Defeated by Jin at the Battle of Yanling King Kang of Chu 楚康王 Xiong Zhao 熊招 ruled 559 545 BCE son of King Gong Jia ao 郟敖 Xiong Yuan 熊員 ruled 544 541 BCE son of King Kang murdered by his uncle the future King Ling King Ling of Chu 楚靈王 Xiong Wei 熊圍 changed to Xiong Qian 熊虔 ruled 540 529 BCE uncle of Jia ao and younger brother of King Kang overthrown by his younger brothers and committed suicide Zi ao 訾敖 Xiong Bi 熊比 ruled 529 BCE less than 20 days younger brother of King Ling committed suicide King Ping of Chu 楚平王 Xiong Qiji 熊弃疾 changed to Xiong Ju 熊居 ruled 528 516 BCE younger brother of Zi ao tricked Zi ao into committing suicide King Zhao of Chu 楚昭王 Xiong Zhen 熊珍 ruled 515 489 BCE son of King Ping The State of Wu captured the capital Ying and he fled to the State of Sui King Hui of Chu 楚惠王 Xiong Zhang 熊章 ruled 488 432 BCE son of King Zhao He conquered the states of Cai and Chen The year before he died Marquis Yi of Zeng died so he made a commemorative bell and attended the Marquis s funeral at Suizhou King Jian of Chu 楚簡王 Xiong Zhong 熊中 ruled 431 408 BCE son of King Hui King Sheng of Chu 楚聲王 Xiong Dang 熊當 ruled 407 402 BCE son of King Jian King Dao of Chu 楚悼王 Xiong Yi 熊疑 ruled 401 381 BCE son of King Sheng He made Wu Qi chancellor and reformed the Chu government and army King Su of Chu 楚肅王 Xiong Zang 熊臧 ruled 380 370 BCE son of King Dao King Xuan of Chu 楚宣王 Xiong Liangfu 熊良夫 ruled 369 340 BCE brother of King Su Defeated and annexed the Zuo state around 348 BCE King Wei of Chu 楚威王 Xiong Shang 熊商 ruled 339 329 BCE son of King Xuan Defeated and partitioned the Yue state with Qi state King Huai of Chu 楚懷王 Xiong Huai 熊槐 ruled 328 299 BCE son of King Wei was tricked and held hostage by the State of Qin until death in 296 BC King Qingxiang of Chu 楚頃襄王 Xiong Heng 熊橫 ruled 298 263 BCE son of King Huai As a prince one of his elderly tutors was buried at the site of the Guodian Chu Slips in Hubei The Chu capital of Ying was captured and sacked by Qin King Kaolie of Chu 楚考烈王 Xiong Yuan 熊元 ruled 262 238 BCE son of King Qingxiang Moved capital to Shouchun King You of Chu 楚幽王 Xiong Han 熊悍 ruled 237 228 BCE son of King Kaolie King Ai of Chu 楚哀王 Xiong You 熊猶 or Xiong Hao 熊郝 ruled 228 BCE brother of King You killed by Fuchu Fuchu 楚王負芻 熊負芻 Xiong Fuchu ruled 227 223 BCE brother of King Ai Captured by Qin troops and deposed Lord Changping 昌平君 ruled 223 BCE Chu conquered by Qin brother of Fuchu killed in battle against QinOthersChen Sheng 陳勝 as King Yin of Chu 楚隱王 ruled 210 209 BCE Jing Ju 景駒 as King Jia of Chu 楚假王 Jia for fake ruled 209 208 BCE Xiong Xin 熊心 as Emperor Yi of Chu 楚義帝 originally King Huai II 楚後懷王 ruled 208 206 BCE grandson or great grandson of King Huai Xiang Yu 項羽 as Hegemon King of Western Chu 西楚霸王 ruled 206 202 BCEPeople editQu Yuan poet who committed suicide Lord Chunshen one of the Four Lords of the Warring States Xiang Yu the Hegemon King of Western Chu who defeated the Qin at Julu and vied with Liu Bang in the Chu Han Contention Liu Bang later citizen of the Qin dynasty and then founder of the Han dynastyAstronomy editMain article Chinese constellations In traditional Chinese astronomy Chu is represented by a star in the Twelve States asterism part of the Girl lunar mansion in the Black Turtle symbol Opinions differ however as to whether that star is Phi 43 or 24 Capricorni 44 It is also represented by the star Epsilon Ophiuchi in the Right Wall asterism in the Heavenly Market enclosure 45 46 Biology editThe virus taxa Chuviridae and Jingchuvirales are named after Chǔ 47 See also editPrime Minister of Chu Chu Silk Manuscript Chu Kingdom Han dynasty References editCitations edit 楚都丹阳 Archived from the original on 2011 07 07 Baxter amp Sagart 2014 p 332 Chu Encyclopedia Britannica 3 November 2023 河南库区发掘工作圆满结束 出土文物已通过验收 合肥晚报 2011 01 25 Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 科大考古队觅宝千余件 凤凰网 2011 01 25 Archived from the original on 2018 09 30 Retrieved 2011 02 17 Theobald Ulrich 2018 The Regional State of Chu 楚 in ChinaKnowledge de An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History Literature and Art Zhang Zhengming 2019 A History Of Chu Volume 1 Honolulu Enrich Professional Publishing p 46 47 a b c Sima Qian 楚世家 House of Chu Records of the Grand Historian in Chinese Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 3 December 2011 Yu Ding Evidence of the Extermination of the State of E during the Western Zhou Dynasty 禹鼎 西周灭鄂国的见证 in Chinese Archived from the original on 4 August 2012 Retrieved 23 October 2010 Lothar von Falkenahausen in Cambridge History of Ancient China 1999 page 516 Cho Yun Hsu in Cambridge History of Ancient China 1999 page 556 5 僖公 BOOK V DUKE XI The Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities in Chinese Translated by James Legge with modifications from Andrew Miller Retrieved 28 March 2018 from Zuo zhuan twelfth year of Duke Xi of Lu 左傳 僖公十二年 黃人恃諸侯之睦于齊也 不共楚職 曰 自郢及我 九百里 焉能害我 夏 楚滅黃 The people of Huang relying on the friendship of the States with Qi did not render the tribute which was due from them to Chu saying From Ying the capital of Chu to us is 900 li what harm can Chu do to us This summer Chu extinguished Huang a b c d e Gu Donggao 1993 春秋大事表 Zhonghua Book Company pp 940 945 972 1140 2055 2066 ISBN 9787101012187 Brindley 2015 p 86 a b Li and Zheng page 188 The Warring States in Chinese Retrieved 4 October 2010 Traditionally taken to be the Qu 屈 Jing 景 and Zhao 昭 Sima Qian Records of the Grand Historian Biography of Xiang Yu 項羽本紀 Constance A Cook 1999 Defining Chu Image and Reality in Ancient China University of Hawaii Press pp 3 21 22 32 168 ISBN 0824818857 Constance A Cook 1999 Defining Chu Image and Reality in Ancient China University of Hawaii Press pp 1 4 149 151 165 ISBN 0824818857 Constance A Cook 1999 Defining Chu Image and Reality in Ancient China University of Hawaii Press pp 140 150 ISBN 0824818857 Peng Peng 2020 Metalworking in Bronze Age China The Lost Wax Process By Peng Peng cambria Press ISBN 9781604979626 a b Walker Hera S September 1998 Indigenous or Foreign A Look at the Origins of the Monkey Hero Sun Wukong PDF Sino Platonic Papers University of Pennsylvania pp 53 54 Lin Qingzhang 2008 中國學術思想研究輯刊 二編 Volume 6 p 176 ISBN 9789866528071 Yu Suisheng 1993 Liăng Zhōu jinwen yunwen he xian Qin Chŭ yin 2 ed Journal of Chuxiong Teacher s College pp 105 109 permanent dead link LaPolla Randy J 2010 01 01 Language Contact and Language Change in the History of the Sinitic Languages Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences The Harmony of Civilization and Prosperity for All Selected Papers of Beijing Forum 2004 2008 2 5 6858 6868 doi 10 1016 j sbspro 2010 05 036 ISSN 1877 0428 Tian Jizhou 1989 Chuguo ji qi minzu The country of Chu and its nationalities Zhongguo Minzushi Yanjiu 2 1 17 Behr 2009 Chamberlain 2016 p 67 You Rujie 1992 Dong Kun 2006 etc Ye Xiaofeng 2014 上古楚语中的南亚语成分 Austroasiatic elements in ancient Chu dialect PDF Minzu Yuwen 3 28 36 Archived from the original PDF on 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2020 09 09 Schuessler Axel 2007 An Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese University of Hawaii Press p 193 316 7 Shorto H A Mon Khmer Comparative Dictionary Ed Paul Sidwell 2006 205 p 115 中國早期國家性質 Zhishufang Press 2003 p 372 ISBN 9789867938176 Song Zhiying 2012 左传 研究文献辑刊 全二十二册 Beijing National Library of China publishing house ISBN 9787501346158 Tian Chengfang Autumn 2008 從新出文字材料論楚沈尹氏之族屬源流 Jianbo 简帛 Archived from the original on 2015 02 06 Retrieved 2017 09 28 via 简帛网 Hong Gang 2012 财政史研究 中国财政经济出版社 a b Gongyang Zhuan Duke Wen 6th year of Duke Xuan 8th year of Anhui Provincial Institute 2015 p 83 See also the Tsinghua Bamboo Slips a b Ziju 子居 清华简 楚居 解析 in Chinese jianbo org Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 10 April 2012 Note Shiji calls him Xiong Zhihong 熊摯紅 and says his younger Xiong Yan killed him and usurped the throne However Zuo Zhuan and Guoyu both say that Xiong Zhi abdicated due to illness and was succeeded by brother Xiong Yan Shiji also says he was the younger brother of Xiong Kang but historians generally agree that he was the son of Xiong Kang Activities of Exhibition and Education in Astronomy 天文教育資訊網 Archived 2011 05 22 at the Wayback Machine 4 Jul 2006 in Chinese Allen Richard Star Names Their Lore and Meaning Capricornus Richard Hinckley Allen Star Names Their Lore and Meaning Ophiuchus penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 23 October 2015 AEEA 天文教育資訊網 Archived 2011 05 22 at the Wayback Machine 24 Jun 2006 in Chinese Wolf Yuri Krupovic Mart Zhang Yong Zhen Maes Piet Dolja Valerian Koonin Eugene V Kuhn Jens H Megataxonomy of negative sense RNA viruses International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses ICTV Archived from the original docx on 13 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2019 Sources edit Anhui Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology and Bengbu Museum June 2015 The Excavation of the tomb of Bai Lord of the Zhongli State Chinese Archaeology Berlin Walter de Gruyter 14 1 62 85 doi 10 1515 char 2014 0008 Baxter William H et al 2014 Old Chinese A New Reconstruction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 994537 5 Behr Wolfgang 2017 The language of the bronze inscriptions In Shaughnessy Edward L ed Kinship Studies of Recently Discovered Bronze Inscritpions from Ancient China The Chinese University Press of Hong Kong pp 9 32 ISBN 978 9 629 96639 3 Behr Wolfgang 2009 Dialects diachrony diglossia or all three Tomb text glimpses into the language s of Chǔ TTW 3 Zurich 26 29 VI 2009 Genius Loci 1 48 Brindley Erica Fox 2015 Ancient China and the Yue Perceptions and Identities on the Southern Frontier c 400 BCE 50 CE Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107084780 Chamberlain James R 2016 Kra Dai and the Proto History of South China and Vietnam Journal of the Siam Society 104 27 77 Cook Constance A et al eds January 2004 Defining Chu Image and Reality in Ancient China University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2905 0 Sima Qian Records of the Grand Historian 史記 So Jenny F 2000 Music in the Age of Confucius Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M Sackler Gallery Smithsonian Institution ISBN 0 295 97953 4 Zhang Shuyi 2008 Investigation of the Pre Qin Surname System 先秦姓氏制度考察 in Chinese Fuzhou Fujian People s Publishing Zuo Qiuming Zuo Zhuan 左传 Further reading editMiyake Marc 2018 Chu and Kra Dai Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chu state amp oldid 1188946699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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