fbpx
Wikipedia

Three Kingdoms

The Three Kingdoms (simplified Chinese: 三国; traditional Chinese: 三國; pinyin: Sān Guó) from 220 to 280 AD was the tripartite division of China among the dynastic states of Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu.[1] The Three Kingdoms period was preceded by the Eastern Han dynasty and was followed by the Western Jin dynasty. The short-lived state of Yan on the Liaodong Peninsula, which lasted from 237 to 238, is sometimes considered as a "4th kingdom".[2]

Three Kingdoms period
三國時代
220 – 280 AD
Time-lapse of the various conquests and territorial changes before and during the Three Kingdoms era.
LocationMainland China, East Asia
Key eventsEnd of the Han dynasty
(189–220)
Main Three Kingdoms period
(220–280)
Battle of Chibi
(208)
Battle of Yiling
(221-222)
Three Kingdoms
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese三國
Simplified Chinese三国
Hanyu PinyinSānguó
Literal meaning"three states"
Vietnamese name
VietnameseTam Quốc
Hán-Nôm三國
Korean name
Hangul삼국
Hanja三國
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationSamguk
Japanese name
Hiraganaさんごく
Kyūjitai三國
Shinjitai三国
Transcriptions
RomanizationSangoku
Three Kingdoms period
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese三國時代
Simplified Chinese三国时代
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSānguó Shídài
Bopomofoㄙㄢ   ㄍㄨㄛˊ   ㄕˊ   ㄉㄞˋ
Gwoyeu RomatzyhSangwo Shyrday
Wade–GilesSan1-kuo2 Shih2-tai4
Tongyong PinyinSanguó Shíhdài
Yale RomanizationSāngwó Shŕdài
IPA[sán.kwǒ ʂɻ̩̌.tâɪ]
Wu
RomanizationSẽ-kueʔ sy-de
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSāamgwok Sìhdoih
JyutpingSaam1gwok3 Si4doi6
IPA[saːm˥.kʷɔːk̚˧ siː˩.tɔːy˨]
Vietnamese name
VietnameseTam Quốc thời đại
Hán-Nôm三國時代
Korean name
Hangul삼국 시대
Hanja三國時代
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationSamguk sidae
Japanese name
Hiraganaさんごくじだい
Kyūjitai三國時代
Shinjitai三国時代
Transcriptions
RomanizationSangokujidai

Academically, the period of the Three Kingdoms refers to the period between the establishment of Cao Wei in 220 and the conquest of the Eastern Wu by the Western Jin in 280. The earlier, "unofficial" part of the period, from 184 to 220, was marked by chaotic infighting between warlords in various parts of China during the downfall of the Eastern Han dynasty. The middle part of the period, from 220 to 263, was marked by a more militarily stable arrangement between three rival states of Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu. The later part of the era was marked by the conquest of Shu by Wei in 263, the usurpation of Cao Wei by the Western Jin in 266, and the conquest of Eastern Wu by the Western Jin in 280.

The Three Kingdoms period is one of the bloodiest in Chinese history.[3] A nationwide census taken in 280 AD, following the reunification of the Three Kingdoms under the Jin shows a total of 2,459,840 households and 16,163,863 individuals which was only a fraction of the 10,677,960 households, and 56,486,856 individuals reported during the Han era.[4] While the census may not have been particularly accurate due to a multitude of factors of the times, in 280, the Jin did make an attempt to account for all individuals where they could.[5]

Technology advanced significantly during this period. Shu chancellor Zhuge Liang invented the wooden ox, suggested to be an early form of the wheelbarrow,[6] and improved on the repeating crossbow.[7] Wei mechanical engineer Ma Jun is considered by many to be the equal of his predecessor Zhang Heng.[8] He invented a hydraulic-powered, mechanical puppet theatre designed for Emperor Ming of Wei, square-pallet chain pumps for irrigation of gardens in Luoyang, and the ingenious design of the south-pointing chariot, a non-magnetic directional compass operated by differential gears.[9]

Although relatively short, this historical period has been greatly romanticized in the cultures of China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam.[10] It has been celebrated and popularized in operas, folk stories, novels and in more recent times, films, television, and video games. The best known of these is Luo Guanzhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a Ming dynasty historical novel based on events in the Three Kingdoms period.[11] The authoritative historical record of the era is Chen Shou's Records of the Three Kingdoms, along with Pei Songzhi's later annotations of the text.

The English-language term "Three Kingdoms" is something of a misnomer, since each state was eventually headed not by a king, but by an emperor who claimed suzerainty over all China.[12] Nevertheless, the term "Three Kingdoms" has become standard among English-speaking sinologists.

Periodization

There is no set time period for the era. The majority view uses the years 220–280 as endpoints, beginning with the abdication of the last Han emperor and ending with the reunification of China by the first Jin emperor. Strictly speaking, the Three Kingdoms, or independent states, only existed from the proclamation of the Eastern Wu ruler to be emperor in 229 until the downfall of Shu Han in 263. Interpretations of the period outside performative political acts push the beginning back into the later years of the Han, with the decline of the Han royal house.

Several other starting points for the period are given by Chinese historians: the Yellow Turban Rebellion in 184;[13][14] the year after the beginning of the rebellion, 185;[15] Dong Zhuo deposing Emperor Shao of Han and enthroning Emperor Xian of Han in 189;[16][17] Dong Zhuo sacking Luoyang and moving the capital to Chang'an in 190;[18] or Cao Cao placing the emperor under his control in Xuchang in 196.[19][20][21][22][23]

Mao Zonggang, a commentator on the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, suggests that the historiography of the Three Kingdoms began with the rise of the Ten Eunuchs. In his commentary on Chapter 120 of the novel, Mao states:

The three kingdoms formed when the Han royal house declined. The Han royal house declined when the eunuchs abused the sovereign and officials subverted the government.[24]

He further argues that the Romance of the Three Kingdoms defines the end of the era as 280, the downfall of Wu, justifying:

As the novel focuses on Han, it could have ended with the fall of Han. But Wei usurped Han. To end the tale before Han's enemy had itself met its fate would be to leave the reader unsatisfied. The novel could have ended with the fall of Wei, but Han's ally was Wu. To end the tale before Han's ally had fallen would be to leave the reader with an incomplete picture. So the tale had to end with the fall of Wu.[24]

As the Jin unification was itself short-lived, the entire period between the fall of Han and the Sui unification (220–589) is sometimes periodized together as "the period of disunity", "Wei, Jin, Northern and Southern dynasties" (or even "Northern and Southern dynasties" alone, though that more commonly means 420–589 between Jin and Sui), or "the Six Dynasties period".[24][25]

History

Yellow Turban Rebellion

 
Map of Chinese provinces in the prelude of Three Kingdom period
(In the late Han dynasty period, 189 AD).
 
Map showing the Yellow Turban Rebellion in Eastern Han Dynasty of China.

The power of the Eastern Han dynasty went into depression and steadily declined from a variety of political and economic problems after the death of Emperor He in 105 AD. A series of Han emperors ascended the throne while still youths, and "de facto" imperial power often rested with the emperors' older relatives. As these relatives occasionally were loath to give up their influence, emperors would, upon reaching maturity, be forced to rely on political alliances with senior officials and eunuchs to achieve control of the government. Political posturing and infighting between imperial relatives and eunuch officials were a constant problem in the Chinese government at the time.[26] During the reigns of Emperor Huan (r. 146–168) and Emperor Ling (r. 168–189), leading officials' dissatisfaction with the eunuchs' usurpations of power reached a peak, and many began to openly protest against them. The first and second protests met with failure, and the court eunuchs persuaded the emperor to execute many of the protesting scholars. Some local rulers seized the opportunity to exert despotic control over their lands and citizens, since many feared to speak out in the oppressive political climate. Emperors Huan and Ling's reigns were recorded as particularly dark periods of Han dynasty rule. In addition to political oppression and mismanagement, China experienced a number of natural disasters during this period, and local rebellions sprung up throughout the country.

In the third month of 184, Zhang Jiao, leader of the Way of Supreme Peace, a Taoist movement, along with his two brothers Zhang Liang and Zhang Bao, led the movement's followers in a rebellion against the government that was called the Yellow Turban Rebellion. Their movement quickly attracted followers and soon numbered several hundred thousand and received support from many parts of China. They had 36 bases throughout China, with large bases having 10,000 or more followers and minor bases having 6,000 to 7,000, similar to Han armies. Their motto was:

"The Grey Sky[a] has perished, the Yellow Sky[b] will soon rise; in this year of jiazi,[c] let there be prosperity in the world!"
(蒼天已死,黃天當立。歲在甲子,天下大吉。)[d]

Emperor Ling dispatched generals Huangfu Song, Lu Zhi, and Zhu Jun to lead the Han armies against the rebels, and decreed that local governments had to supply soldiers to assist in their efforts. It is at this point that the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms begins its narrative. The Yellow Turbans were ultimately defeated and its surviving followers dispersed throughout China, but due to the turbulent situation throughout the empire, many were able to survive as bandits in mountainous areas, thus continuing their ability to contribute to the turmoil of the era.

With the widespread increase in bandits across the Chinese nation, the Han army had no way to repel each and every raiding party. In 188, Emperor Ling accepted a memorial from Liu Yan suggesting he grant direct administrative power over feudal provinces and direct command of regional military to local governors, as well as promoting them in rank and filling such positions with members of the Liu family or court officials. This move made provinces (zhou) official administrative units, and although they had power to combat rebellions, the later intra-governmental chaos allowed these local governors to easily rule independently of the central government. Liu Yan was also promoted as governor of Yi Province[e]. Soon after this move, Liu Yan severed all of his region's ties to the Han imperial court, and several other areas followed suit.

Dong Zhuo in power

In the same year, Emperor Ling died, and another struggle began between the court eunuchs for control of the imperial family. Court eunuch Jian Shuo planned to kill Regent Marshal He Jin, a relative of the imperial family, and to replace the crown prince Liu Bian with his younger brother Liu Xie, the Prince of Chenliu (in present-day Kaifeng), though his plan was unsuccessful. Liu Bian took the Han throne as Emperor Shao, and He Jin plotted with warlord Yuan Shao to assassinate the Ten Attendants, a clique of twelve eunuchs led by Zhang Rang who controlled much of the imperial court. He Jin also ordered Dong Zhuo, the frontier general in Liang Province, and Ding Yuan, Inspector of Bing Province,[f] to bring troops to the capital to reinforce his position of authority. The eunuchs learned of He Jin's plot, and had him assassinated before Dong Zhuo reached the capital Luoyang. When Yuan Shao's troops reached Luoyang, they stormed the palace complex, killing the Ten Attendants and 2,000 of the eunuchs' supporters. Though this move effectively ended the century-long feud between the eunuchs and the imperial family, this event prompted the invitation of Dong Zhuo to the outskirts of Luoyang from the northwest boundary of China.

On the evening of 24 September 189, General Dong Zhuo observed that Luoyang was set ablaze—as a result of a power struggle between the eunuchs and civil service—and commanded his army forward to strike down the disorder.[27] As the emperor had lost any remaining military or political power, Dong Zhuo seized the de facto control of the government located at Luoyang.[27] On 28 September, Dong Zhuo deposed Liu Bian from the imperial Han throne in favour of Liu Xie.[27] In the following weeks, rebellions broke out throughout all of China.[28]

In East China, in an attempt to restore the power of the Han, a large coalition against Dong Zhuo began to rise, with leaders such as Yuan Shao, Yuan Shu, and Cao Cao.[28] Many provincial officials were compelled to join or risk elimination.[29] In 191, Sun Jian (Yuan Shu's subordinate) led an army against Dong Zhuo and drove him from Luoyang to Chang'an.[30] In the following year (192), Lü Bu, Dong Zhuo's former bodyguard, assassinated Dong Zhuo.[29] It is said that Dong Zhuo's body was thrown into the street with a lit wick in his navel, which supposedly burned with the same brilliance of the sun for a period of four days.[31]

Collapse of central power

In 192, there was some talk among the coalition of appointing Liu Yu, an imperial relative, as emperor, and gradually its members began to fall out. Most of the warlords in the coalition, with a few exceptions, sought the increase of personal military power in the time of instability instead of seriously wishing to restore the Han dynasty's authority. The Han empire was divided between a number of regional warlords. As a result of the complete collapse of the central government and eastern alliance, the North China Plain fell into warfare and anarchy with many contenders vying for success or survival.[29] Emperor Xian fell into the hands of various warlords in Chang'an.

Dong Zhuo, confident in his success, was slain by his follower Lü Bu, who plotted with minister Wang Yun. Lü Bu, in turn, was attacked by Dong Zhuo's former officers: Li Jue, Guo Si, Zhang Ji and Fan Chou. Wang Yun and his whole family were executed. Lü Bu fled to Zhang Yang, a northern warlord, and remained with him for a time before briefly joining Yuan Shao, but it was clear that Lü Bu was far too independent to serve another.

Yuan Shao operated from Ye city in Ji Province, extending his power north of the Yellow River.[29] Han Fu had formerly been the Governor of Ji Province, but he came under the control of Yuan Shao and was replaced by him.[30]

Between the Yellow and Huai rivers, a conflict had erupted between Yuan Shu, Cao Cao, Tao Qian (Governor of Xu Province) and Lü Bu.[29] Cao Cao forced the Yellow Turbans to surrender in 192,[32] drove Yuan Shu to the south of the Huai River in 193,[29] inflicted devastation upon Tao Qian in 194,[30] received the surrender of Liu Bei (then a commander under Tao Qian) in 196,[33] and captured and executed Lü Bu in 198.[33] Cao was now in complete control of the southern part of the North China Plain.[33]

In the northeast, Gongsun Du held control of the Liaodong Peninsula and its environs, where he had established a state.[34] He was succeeded by his son Gongsun Kang in 204.[34] In the north across the frontier, since the fall of imperial control, the region had become chaotic as the Xiongnu remnants came into conflict with the Xianbei.[34]Goguryeo was invaded by warlord Gongsun Kang in 204, resulting in the Daifang Commandery. In 209, Kang invaded Goguryeo again, took the capital of Goguryeo and forced them to submit. Goguryeo was forced to move its capital further east.[35] In Liang Province (present-day Gansu), rebellion had erupted in 184.[34] In the west, Liu Yan had been Governor of Yi Province since his appointment in 188.[36] He was succeeded by his son Liu Zhang in 194.[36] Directly north of Liu Zhang's territory, Zhang Lu (leader of the Five Pecks of Rice) led a theocratic government at Hanzhong commandery (on the upper Han River).[37] Liu Biao held control over his province as the Governor of Jing Province.[37] Sun Quan held control over the lower Yangtze.[37]

Xu and Yan provinces

In 194, Cao Cao went to war with Tao Qian of Xu Province, because Tao's subordinate Zhang Kai had murdered Cao Cao's father Cao Song. Tao Qian received the support of Liu Bei and Gongsun Zan, but even then it seemed as if Cao Cao's superior forces would overrun Xu Province entirely. Cao Cao received word that Lü Bu had seized Yan Province in his absence, and accordingly he retreated, putting a halt to hostilities with Tao Qian for the time being. Tao Qian died in the same year, leaving his province to Liu Bei. A year later, in 195, Cao Cao managed to drive Lü Bu out of Yan Province. Lü Bu fled to Xu Province and was received by Liu Bei, and an uneasy alliance began between the two.

Afterwards, Lü Bu betrayed Liu Bei and seized Xu Province, forming an alliance with Yuan Shu's remnant forces. Liu Bei, together with his followers Guan Yu and Zhang Fei, fled to Cao Cao, who accepted him. Soon, preparations were made for an attack on Lü Bu, and the combined forces of Cao Cao and Liu Bei invaded Xu Province. Lü Bu's men deserted him, Yuan Shu's forces never arrived as reinforcements, and he was bound by his own subordinates Song Xian (宋憲) and Wei Xu (魏續) and executed on Cao Cao's order.

Huai River

Yuan Shu, after being driven south in 193, established himself at his new capital Shouchun (present-day Anhui).[33] He attempted to regain lost territory north of the Huai River.[33] In 197, Yuan Shu declared himself emperor of his own dynasty.[33] The move was a strategic blunder, as it drew the ire of many warlords across the land, including Yuan Shu's own subordinates who almost all abandoned him.[32] Abandoned by almost all his allies and followers, he perished in 199.[38]

Emperor Xian's fate

In August 195, Emperor Xian fled the tyranny of Li Jue at Chang'an and made a year long hazardous journey east in search of supporters. In 196, Emperor Xian came under the protection and control of Cao Cao after he had succeeded in fleeing from the warlords of Chang'an.[38] Establishing the imperial court at Xuchang in Henan, Cao Cao—who now held the de facto control—rigorously followed the formalities of the court and justified his actions as a loyal minister of the Han.[38] By then, most of the smaller contenders for power had either been absorbed by larger ones or destroyed. This was an extremely important move for Cao Cao following the suggestion from his primary adviser, Xun Yu, commenting that by supporting the authentic emperor, Cao Cao would have the formal legal authority to control the other warlords and force them to comply in order to restore the Han dynasty.

North China Plain

Cao Cao, whose zone of control was the precursor to the state of Cao Wei, had raised an army in 189. In several strategic movements and battles, he controlled Yan Province and defeated several factions of the Yellow Turban rebels. This earned him the aid of other local militaries controlled by Zhang Miao and Chen Gong, who joined his cause to create his first sizeable army. He continued the effort and absorbed approximately 300,000 Yellow Turban rebels into his army as well as a number of clan-based military groups from the eastern side of Qing Province.

Since 192, He developed military agricultural colonies (tuntian) to support his army. Although the system imposed a heavy tax on hired civilian farmers (40% to 60% of agricultural production), the farmers were more than pleased to be able to work with relative stability and professional military protection in a time of chaos. This was later said to be his second important policy for success.

In 200, Dong Cheng, an imperial relative, received a secret edict from Emperor Xian to assassinate Cao Cao. He collaborated with Liu Bei on this effort, but Cao Cao soon found out about the plot and had Dong Cheng and his conspirators executed, with only Liu Bei surviving and fleeing to join Yuan Shao in the north.

After settling the nearby provinces, including a rebellion led by former Yellow Turbans, and internal affairs with the court, Cao Cao turned his attention north to Yuan Shao, who himself had eliminated his northern rival Gongsun Zan that same year. Yuan Shao, himself of higher nobility than Cao Cao, amassed a large army and camped along the northern bank of the Yellow River.

In the summer of 200, after months of preparations, the armies of Cao Cao and Yuan Shao clashed at the Battle of Guandu (near present-day Kaifeng).[38] Cao Cao's army was heavily outnumbered by Yuan Shao.[38] Due to a raid in Yuan's supply train, Yuan's army fell into disorder as they fled back north.[38]

Cao Cao took advantage of Yuan Shao's death in 202, which resulted in division among his sons, and advanced to the north.[38] In 204, after the Battle of Ye, Cao Cao captured the city of Ye.[38] By the end of 207, after a victorious campaign beyond the frontier against the Wuhuan culminating in the Battle of White Wolf Mountain, Cao Cao achieved complete dominance of the North China Plain.[39] He now controlled China's heartland, including Yuan Shao's former territory, and half of the Chinese population.[34]

South of the Yangtze

In 193, Huang Zu led the forces of Liu Biao in a campaign against Sun Jian (Yuan Shu's subordinate general) and killed him.[40] In 194, Sun Ce (aged 18) came into the military service under Yuan Shu.[37] He was given the command of some troops who formerly had been commanded by his late father Sun Jian.[37] In the south, he defeated the warlords of Yang Province, including Liu Yao, Wang Lang, and Yan Baihu.

In 198, Sun Ce (aged 23) declared his independence from Yuan Shu who recently had declared himself emperor.[37] He held control over Danyang, Wu, and Kuaiji commanderies (from present-day Nanjing to the Hangzhou Bay and some outposts at the Fujian coast), while expanding westward in a series of campaigns.[37] By 200, he had conquered Yuzhang commandery (at present-day Lake Poyang in Jiangxi) and Lujiang (north of the Yangtze).[37] In 200, Sun Ce was ambushed and assassinated by the former retainers of a defeated rival from Wu.[40]

Sun Quan (aged 18) succeeded him and quickly established his authority.[40] By 203, he was expanding westward.[40] In 208, Sun Quan defeated Huang Zu (Liu Biao's subordinate commander) around present-day Wuhan.[40] He now held control over the territories south of the Yangtze (below Wuhan, Poyang region, and Hangzhou Bay).[40] His navy established local superiority over the Yangtze.[40] Nevertheless, he would soon come under the threat of Cao Cao's larger armies.[40]

Jing Province

During Dong Zhuo's reign over the Han government, Liu Biao had been appointed as the Governor of Jing Province.[40] His territory was located around his capital Xiangyang and the territory to the south around the Han and Yangtze River.[40] Beyond his eastern border was the territory of Sun Quan.[40]

In 200, during the time of the campaign around Guandu between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao, Liu Bei's forces had been defeated by a detachment of Cao Cao's army, forcing Liu Bei to flee and seek refuge with Liu Biao in Jing Province.[41] In this exile, Liu Bei maintained his followers who had accompanied him and made new connections within Liu Biao's entourage.[41] It was during this time that Liu Bei also met Zhuge Liang.[41]

In the autumn of 208, Liu Biao died and was succeeded by his youngest son Liu Cong over the eldest son Liu Qi through political maneuvering.[40] Liu Bei had become the head of the opposition to a surrender when Cao Cao's army marched southward to Jing.[41] After the advice of his supporters, Liu Cong surrendered to Cao Cao.[40] Cao Cao took control of the province and began appointing scholars and officials from Liu Biao's court to the local government.[40] Meanwhile, Liu Qi had joined Liu Bei to establish a line of defence at the Yangtze River against the surrender to Cao Cao, but they suffered defeat at the hands of Cao Cao.[42] In the aftermath, they retreated and sought support from Sun Quan.[40] Guan Yu (Liu Bei's subordinate lieutenant) had managed to retrieve most of Jing Province's fleet from the Han River.[40] Cao Cao occupied the naval base at Jiangling on the Yangtze River.[40] He would now begin proceeding eastwards towards Sun Quan with his armies and new fleet, while sending messengers to demand Sun Quan's surrender.[43]

Battle of Red Cliffs

In 208, Cao Cao marched south with his army hoping to quickly unify the empire. Liu Biao's son Liu Cong surrendered Jing Province and Cao was able to capture a sizable fleet at Jiangling. Sun Quan, the successor to Sun Ce in the lower Yangtze, continued to resist. His advisor Lu Su secured an alliance with Liu Bei, himself a recent refugee from the north, and Zhou Yu was placed in command of Sun Quan's navy, along with a veteran general who served the Sun family, Cheng Pu. Liu Biao's second son, Liu Qi, joined the alliance with his troops, and the combined armies of 50,000 met Cao Cao's fleet and 200,000-strong force at Red Cliffs that winter. After an initial skirmish, an attack was set in motion beginning with a plan to set fire to Cao Cao's immobilized fleet through the feigned surrender of Sun Quan's general Huang Gai. Cao Cao was defeated decisively and forced to retreat in disarray back to the north. The allied victory at Red Cliffs ensured the survival of Liu Bei and Sun Quan, and provided the basis for the states of Shu and Wu.

Final years of the dynasty

 
Provinces and commanderies in the penultimate year of the Han dynasty (219 AD)

In 209, Zhou Yu captured Jiangling, establishing the south's complete dominance over the Yangtze River.[43] Meanwhile, Liu Bei and his principal adviser Zhuge Liang captured the Xiang River basin commanderies, establishing control over the southern territories of Jing province.[44] Sun Quan was forced to cede the territory around Jiangling to Liu Bei, because he could not establish a proper authority over it after Zhou Yu's death in 210.[44]

In 211, Cao Cao defeated a warlord coalition in the Wei valley, ending in the Battle of Huayin, capturing the territory around Chang'an.[44] In 211, Liu Bei accepted an invitation from Liu Zhang to come to Yi Province for aiding the latter against a threat from the north, namely Zhang Lu of Hanzhong.[45] Liu Bei met people within Liu Zhang's court who wished that he would replace Liu Zhang as the ruler of Yi Province.[45] A year after his arrival, Liu Bei came into conflict with Liu Zhang and turned against him.[45] In summer of 214, Liu Bei received the surrender of Liu Zhang, capturing Yi Province, and established his regime at Chengdu.[45] In 215, Cao Cao captured Hanzhong after attacking and receiving the surrender of Zhang Lu.[46] He had launched the attack from Chang'an through the Qinling Mountain passes to Hanzhong.[46] The conquest threatened Liu Bei's territory located directly to the south.[46] Cao Cao progressively increased his titles and power under the puppet Emperor Xian. He became the Chancellor in 208, the Duke of Wei in 214, and the King of Wei in 217.[47] He also compelled Sun Quan to accept suzerainty to Wei, but it had no real effect in practice.[47]

After Liu Bei had captured Yi Province from Liu Zhang in 214, Sun Quan—who had been engaged with Cao Cao in the southeast at the region between the Huai and Yangtze rivers during the intervening years—turned his attention to the middle Yangtze.[44] Cao Cao and Sun Quan had gained no success in breaking each other's positions.[44] Liu Fu, an administrator under Cao Cao, had established agricultural garrisons at Hefei and Shouchun to defend Cao's territory near the Huai river.[44] Sun Quan resented the fact that Liu Bei, a weaker ally, had gained so much territory west of him and demanded a larger share of the Xiang River basin.[44] In 215, Lü Meng (Sun Quan's officer) was sent to capture Jing province's southern commanderies, but Guan Yu (Liu Bei's general) launched a counterattack.[44] Later that year, Liu Bei and Sun Quan reached a settlement that the Xiang River would serve as the border between their territories.[44]

In the south, Sun Quan had sent He Qin, Lu Xun, and others to expand and conquer territory in what are now southern Zhejiang and Fujian provinces.[44]

In 219, Liu Bei seized Hanzhong by defeating and killing General Xiahou Yuan, who served Cao Cao.[47] Cao Cao sent reinforcements in an unsuccessful attempt to reclaim the territory.[47] Liu Bei had now secured his territory against the north and declared himself the King of Hanzhong.[47] In the east, Sun Quan attempted to capture Hefei from Cao Cao, but he did not succeed.[47]

While Lu Su had been chief commander for Sun Quan in Jing Province, their policy was to maintain the alliance with Liu Bei while Cao Cao was still a threat.[48] This changed when Sun Quan appointed Lü Meng when Lu Su died in 217.[48] In 219, Guan Yu sailed from Jiangling up the Han River towards the city of Fan (near Xianyang), but was unable to capture it.[49] In the autumn of 219, Lü Meng launched a surprise attack by sailing up the Yangtze towards Jiangling, resulting in its capture.[48] Guan Yu was unable to hold his position as most of his army surrendered.[48] He was captured and executed on Sun Quan's order. Cao Cao regained the Han valley, while Sun Quan captured all the territory east of the Yangtze Gorges.[48]

Emergence of the Three Kingdoms

 
Bronze turtle holding a cup, Eastern Wu

At the beginning of 220, Cao Cao died and was succeeded by his son Cao Pi.[48] On 11 December, Emperor Xian abdicated and Cao Pi ascended the imperial throne by proclaiming the heavenly mandate as the Emperor of Wei.[48] On 15 May 221, Liu Bei responded by proclaiming himself as the Emperor of Han.[48] His state would become generally known as Shu Han.[48] Sun Quan continued to recognize his de jure suzerainty to Wei and was enfeoffed as the King of Wu.[48]

At the end of 221, Shu invaded Wu in response for Guan Yu's killing and the loss of Jing Province by Wu.[48] In the spring of 222, Liu Bei arrived at the scene to personally take command of the invasion.[48] Sun Quan dispatched Lu Xun to command over the defence of Wu against the invasion by Shu.[48] Against the advice of his subordinates, Lu Xun waited until Liu Bei was committed along the Yangtze below the Yangtze Gorges.[48] Finally, in the sixth month of 222, Lu Xun launched a series of fire attacks against the flank of Liu Bei's extended position which caused disorder in the Shu army and Liu Bei's retreat to Baidi (near present-day Fengjie).[50] Afterwards in 222, Sun Quan renounced his suzerainty to Wei and declared the independence of Wu.[51] In 223, Liu Bei perished at Baidi.[52] Zhuge Liang now acted as a regent for Liu Shan (aged 17) and held control of the Shu government.[53] Shu and Wu resumed their diplomatic relations by re-establishing peace and alliance in the winter of 223.[54] On 23 June 229, Sun Quan proclaimed himself as the Emperor of Wu.[55]

Shu controlled the upper Han valley and the territory west of the Yangtze Gorges.[56] The Qinling Mountains divided Shu and Wei.[56] Wei held control over the Wei and Huai valley, where agricultural garrisons were established at Shouchun and Hefei to defend Huai.[56] Military sorties by Wu against Hefei and Shouchun would consistently end in failure, thereby confirming Wei's hold over Huai.[56] Wu controlled all of the Yangtze valley.[56] The territory between the Huai and Yangtze was a desolate area, where a largely-static frontier between Wei and Wu had formed at the lower Han valley.[56]

 
Map of the Three Kingdoms

The Three States

Shu

 
Map showing Battle of Yiling between Shu Han and Wu kingdoms.

In 223, Liu Shan rose to the throne of Shu following his father's defeat and death. From 224 to 225, during his southward campaigns, Zhuge Liang conquered the southern territories up to Lake Dian in Yunnan.[53]

In 227, Zhuge Liang transferred his main Shu armies to Hanzhong, and opened up the battle for the northwest with Wei. The next year, he ordered Zhao Yun to attack from Ji Gorge as a diversion while Zhuge himself led the main force to Mount Qi. The vanguard Ma Su suffered a tactical defeat at Jieting and the Shu army was forced to withdraw. In the next six years Zhuge Liang attempted several more offensives, but supply problems limited the capacity for success. In 234, he led his last great northern offensive, reaching the Battle of Wuzhang Plains south of the Wei River. Due to the death of Zhuge Liang in 234, the Shu army was forced once again to withdraw, but were pursued by Wei. The Shu forces began to withdraw; Sima Yi deduced Zhuge Liang's demise and ordered an attack. Shu struck back almost immediately, causing Sima Yi to second guess and allow Shu to withdraw successfully.

Wu

 
Zhuge Liang's Southern Campaign

Sun Quan turned to the aborigines of the southeast, whom the Chinese collectively called the "Shanyue". A collection of successes against the rebellious tribesmen culminated in the victory of 224. In that year, Zhuge Ke ended a three-year siege of Danyang with the surrender of 100,000 Shanyue. Of these, 40,000 were drafted as auxiliaries into the Wu army. Meanwhile, Shu was also experiencing troubles with the indigenous tribes of their south. The southwestern Nanman peoples rose in revolt against Shu authority, captured and looted cities in Yi Province. Zhuge Liang, recognizing the importance of stability in the south, ordered the advance of the Shu armies in three columns against the Nanman. He fought a number of engagements against the chieftain Meng Huo, at the end of which Meng Huo submitted. A tribesman was allowed to reside at the Shu capital Chengdu as an official and the Nanman formed their own battalions within the Shu army.

 
Zhuge Liang's first and second northern expeditions against Cao Wei
 
Zhuge Liang's third northern expedition against Cao Wei
 
Zhuge Liang's fourth and fifth northern expeditions against Cao Wei

In the times of Zhuge Liang's northern offensives, the state of Wu had always been on the defensive against invasions from the north. The area around Hefei was the scene of many bitter battles and under constant pressure from Wei after the Battle of Red Cliffs. Warfare had grown so intense that many of the residents chose to migrate and resettle south of the Yangtze River. After Zhuge Liang's death, attacks on the southern Huai River region intensified but nonetheless, Wei could not break through the line of the river defenses erected by Wu, which included the Ruxu fortress.

Sun Quan's long reign is regarded as a time of plenty for his southern state. Migrations from the north and the settlement of the Shanyue increased manpower for agriculture, especially along the lower reaches of the Yangtze and in Kuaiji Commandery along the southern shore of Hangzhou Bay. River transport blossomed, with the construction of the Zhedong and Jiangnan canals. Trade with Shu flourished, with a huge influx of Shu cotton and the development of celadon and metal industries. Sea journeys were made to Liaodong and the island of Taiwan. In the south, Wu merchants reached Linyi (Southern Vietnam) and Funan Kingdom. As the economy prospered, so too did the arts and culture. In the Yangtze delta, the first Buddhist influences reached the south from Luoyang.

The Eastern Wu era was a formative period in Vietnamese history. A Jiaozhou (modern Vietnam and Guangzhou) prefect, Shi Xie, ruled Vietnam as an autonomous warlord for forty years and was posthumously deified by later Vietnamese emperors.[57] Shi Xie pledged loyalty to Eastern Wu. Originally satisfied with Eastern Wu's rule, the Vietnamese opposed Shi Hui's rebellion against Eastern Wu and attacked him for it. However, when the Wu general Lü Dai betrayed Shi Hui and executed the entire Shi family, the Vietnamese became greatly upset. In 248, the people of Jiaozhi and Jiuzhen commanderies rebelled. Eastern Wu sent Lu Yin to deal with the rebels. He managed to pacify the rebels with a combination of threats and persuasion. However the rebels regrouped under the leadership of Lady Triệu in Jiuzhen and renewed the rebellion with a march on Jiaozhi. After several months of warfare she was defeated and committed suicide.[58]

Wei

In 226, Cao Pi died (aged 40) and was succeeded by his eldest son Cao Rui (aged 22).[59] Minister Chen Qun, General Cao Zhen, General Cao Xiu, and General Sima Yi[g] were appointed as regents, even though Cao Rui was able to manage the government in practice.[59] Eventually the former three died, leaving only Sima Yi as the senior minister and military commander.[59] In 226, Sima Yi successfully defended Xiangyang against an offensive from Wu; this battle was the first time he had command in the field.[60] In 227, Sima Yi was appointed to a post at Chang'an where he managed the military affairs along the Han River.[60]

In 238, Sima Yi was dispatched to command a military campaign against Gongsun Yuan of the self-proclaimed Yan Kingdom in Liaodong, resulting in Sima Yi's capture of his capital Xiangping and massacre of his government.[60] Between 244 and 245, General Guanqiu Jian was dispatched to invade Goguryeo and severely devastated that state.[60] The northeastern frontier of Wei was now secured from any possible threats.[60] The invasions, a retaliation against a Goguryeo raid in 242, destroyed the Goguryeo capital of Hwando, sent its king fleeing, and broke the tributary relationships between Goguryeo and the other tribes of Korea that formed much of Goguryeo's economy. Although the king evaded capture and eventually settled in a new capital, Goguryeo was reduced to such insignificance that for half a century there was no mention of the state in Chinese historical texts.[61]

 
Cao Zhi as depicted in Goddess of Luo River (detail) by Gu Kaizhi, Jin dynasty, China

In 238, Cao Rui perished at age 35.[60] He was succeeded by his adopted son Cao Fang (aged 7), who was a close member of the imperial family.[60] Cao Rui had appointed Cao Shuang and Sima Yi to be Cao Fang's regents, even though he had contemplated to establish a regency council dominated by imperial family members.[60] Cao Shuang held the principal control over the court.[60] Meanwhile, Sima Yi was received the honorific title of Grand Tutor, but had virtually no influence at the court.[60]

Decline and End

 
Three Kingdoms in 262, on the eve of the conquest of Shu, Wei and Wu.

Fall of Shu

After Zhuge Liang's death, his position as chancellor fell to Jiang Wan, Fei Yi and Dong Yun, in that order. But after 258, Shu politics became increasingly controlled by the eunuch faction, led by Huang Hao, and corruption rose. Despite the energetic efforts of Jiang Wei, Zhuge Liang's protégé, Shu was unable to secure any decisive achievement. In 263, Wei launched a three-pronged attack and the Shu army was forced into general retreat from Hanzhong. Jiang Wei hurriedly held a position at Jiange but he was outflanked by the Wei commander Deng Ai, who force-marched his army from Yinping through territory formerly considered impassable. By the winter of the year, the capital Chengdu fell due to the strategic invasion of Wei by Deng Ai who invaded Chengdu personally. The emperor Liu Shan thus surrendered. The state of Shu had come to an end after 43 years. Liu Shan was reinstated to the Wei capital of Luoyang and was given the new title of the "Duke of Anle". Directly translated, it meant the "Duke of Safety and Happiness" and was a trivial position with no actual power.

Fall of Wei

From the late 230s, tensions began to become visible between the imperial Cao clan and the Sima clan. Following the death of Cao Zhen, factionalism was evident between Cao Shuang and the Grand Tutor Sima Yi. In deliberations, Cao Shuang placed his own supporters in important posts and excluded Sima Yi, whom he regarded as a dangerous threat. The power of the Sima clan, one of the great landowning families of the Han dynasty, was bolstered by Sima Yi's military victories. Additionally, Sima Yi was an extremely capable strategist and politician. In 238 he crushed the rebellion of Gongsun Yuan's self-proclaimed Yan Kingdom and brought the Liaodong region directly under central control. Ultimately, he outmanoeuvred Cao Shuang in power play. Taking advantage of an excursion by the imperial clansmen to the Gaoping Tombs, Sima Yi undertook a putsch in Luoyang, forcing Cao Shuang's faction from authority. Many protested against the overwhelming power of the Sima family; notable among these were the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove. One of the sages, Xi Kang, was executed as part of the purges after Cao Shuang's downfall.

Cao Huan succeeded to the throne in 260 after Cao Mao was killed in a failed coup against Sima Zhao. Soon after, Sima Zhao died and his title as Duke of Jìn was inherited by his son Sima Yan. Sima Yan immediately began plotting to become emperor but faced stiff opposition. Following advice from his advisors, Cao Huan decided the best course of action would be to abdicate, unlike his predecessor Cao Mao. Sima Yan seized the throne in 266 after forcing Cao Huan's abdication, effectively overthrowing the Wei dynasty and establishing the successor Jin dynasty. This situation was similar to the deposal of Emperor Xian of Han by Cao Pi 40 years earlier.

Fall of Wu

Following Sun Quan's death and the ascension of the young Sun Liang to the throne in 252, the state of Wu went into steady decline. Successful Wei suppression of rebellions in the southern Huai River region by Sima Zhao and Sima Shi reduced any opportunity of Wu influence. The fall of Shu signalled a change in Wei politics. After Liu Shan surrendered to Wei, Sima Yan (grandson of Sima Yi), overthrew the Wei emperor and proclaimed his own dynasty of Jin in 266, ending 46 years of Cao dominion in the north. After Jin's rise, emperor Sun Xiu of Wu died, and his ministers gave the throne to Sun Hao. Sun Hao was a promising young man, but upon ascension he became a tyrant, killing or exiling all who dared oppose him in the court. In 269 Yang Hu, a Jin commander in the south, started preparing for the invasion of Wu by ordering the construction of a fleet and the training of marines in Sichuan under Wang Jun. Four years later, Lu Kang, the last great general of Wu, died leaving no competent successor. The planned Jin offensive finally came at the end of 279. Sima Yan launched five simultaneous offensives along the Yangtze River from Jianye (present-day Nanjing) to Jiangling while the Sichuan fleet sailed downriver to Jing Province. Under the strain of such an enormous attack, the Wu forces collapsed and Jianye fell in the third month of 280. Sun Hao surrendered and was given a fiefdom on which to live out his days. This marked the end of the Three Kingdoms era, and the beginning of a break in the forthcoming 300 years of disunity.

Impact

Population

 
Pottery dwelling around a large courtyard, a siheyuan. Unearthed in 1967 in a tomb of Hubei built during the kingdom of Eastern Wu, Three Kingdoms period, National Museum of China, Beijing

After the Yellow Turban Rebellion, serious famine followed in the Central Plains of China. After his coming to power, Dong Zhuo gave full swing to his army to loot and plunder the population, and abduct women into forced marriages, servants or consorts. When the Guandong Coalition was starting the campaign against Dong Zhuo, he embarked upon a scorched earth campaign, proclaiming that "all the population of Luoyang be forced to move to Chang'an, all the palaces, temples, official residences and homes be burnt, no one should stay within that area of 200 li". Considering the hardships of that time this amounted to a death sentence for many, and cries of discontent rose as the population of Luoyang decreased sharply. When Cao Cao attacked Xu Province, it was said that "hundreds of thousands of men and women were buried alive, even dogs and chickens did not survive. The Si River was blocked. From then on, these five towns never recovered."[citation needed] When Li Jue and his army were advancing towards the Guanzhong area, "there remained hundreds of thousands of people, but Li Jue allowed his army to plunder the cities and the people, thus making the people have nothing but eat each other to death."[citation needed]

The following table shows the severe decrease of population during that period. From the late Eastern Han to the Western Jin dynasty, despite the length of about 125 years, the peak population only equaled 35.3% of the peak population during the Eastern Han dynasty. From the Western Jin dynasty to the Sui dynasty, the population never recovered. High militarization of the population was common. For example, the population of Shu was 900,000, but the military numbered over 100,000. The Records of the Three Kingdoms contains population figures for the Three Kingdoms. As with many Chinese historical population figures, these numbers are likely to be less than the actual populations, since census and tax records went hand in hand, and tax evaders were often not on records.

During the Three Kingdoms period (220–280 AD), a number of statuses intermediate between freedom and slavery developed, but none of them are thought to have exceeded 1 percent of the population.[62]

Three Kingdoms Period Populations[63]
Year Households Population Notes
Eastern Han dynasty, 156 10,679,600 56,486,856
Shu Han, 221 200,000 900,000
Shu Han, 263 280,000 1,082,000 At Shu's demise, the population contained 102,000 armed soldiers and 40,000 various officials.
Eastern Wu, 238 520,000 2,567,000
Eastern Wu, 280 530,000 2,535,000 At Wu's demise, the population had 32,000 officials, 230,000 soldiers, and 5,000 imperial concubines.
Cao Wei, 260 663,423 4,432,881
Western Jin dynasty, 280 2,495,804 16,163,863 After reuniting China, the Jin dynasty's population was greatest around this time.

While it is clear that warfare undoubtedly took many lives during this period, the census figures do not support the idea that tens of millions were wiped out solely from warfare. Other factors such as mass famines and infectious diseases, due to the collapse of sustaining governance and migrations out of China must be taken into account.[64][65]

Economy

In the late Eastern Han dynasty, due to natural disasters and social unrest, the economy was badly depressed, leading to the massive waste of farmland. Some local landlords and aristocracy established their own strongholds to defend themselves and developed agriculture, which gradually evolved into a self-sufficient manorial system. The system of strongholds and manors also had effects on the economical mode of following dynasties. In addition, because of the collapse of the imperial court, those worn copper coins were not melted and reminted and many privately minted coins appeared. In the Three Kingdoms period, newly minted coins never made their way into currency. Due to the collapse of the coinage, Cao Wei officially declared silk cloth and grains as the main currencies in 221.[66]

In economic terms the division of the Three Kingdoms reflected a reality that long endured. Even during the Northern Song dynasty, 700 years after the Three Kingdoms period, it was possible to think of China as being composed of three great regional markets. (The status of the northwest was slightly ambivalent, as it had links with the northern region and Sichuan). These geographical divisions are underscored by the fact that the main communication routes between the three main regions were all human-made: the Grand Canal linking north and south, the hauling-way through the Three Gorges of the Yangtze River linking southern China with Sichuan and the gallery roads joining Sichuan with the northwest. The break into three separate entities was quite natural and even anticipated by such political foresight as that of Zhuge Liang (see Longzhong Plan).

Literature

Cao Cao, the founder of the Wei kingdom and his four sons were influential poets, especially Cao Zhi (192–232) and Cao Pi (187–226).[67] Cao Pi wrote the earliest work of literary criticism, the Essay on Literature. Cao Zhi, together with Xu Gan, sponsored a resurgence of the Jian'an style of lyric poetry. Cao Zhi is considered by most modern critics to be the most important Chinese writer between Qu Yuan and Tao Yuanming.[68]

Historiography

Sources

 
A fragment of the biography of Bu Zhi from the Records of the Three Kingdoms, part of the Dunhuang manuscripts

The standard history of the period is the Records of the Three Kingdoms, compiled by the Western Jin historian Chen Shou in the third century AD. The work synthesizes the histories of the rival states of Cao Wei, Shu Han and Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period into a single compiled text. An expanded version of the Records of the Three Kingdoms was published by the Liu Song historian Pei Songzhi in 429, whose Annotations to Records of the Three Kingdoms supplemented the original with sizable excerpts of texts unused by Chen Shou and provided commentaries. The resulting work nearly doubled the size of the original Records,[69] and the composite work of Chen and Pei are canonized as official history (正史).[70]

In addition to the Records of the Three Kingdoms, the years 189 to 220 are also covered by the previous standard history Book of the Later Han by Fan Ye (a contemporary of Pei Songzhi), which mainly draws from documents of the Han court.[71] For the later years, biographies of the Jin dynasty progenitors Sima Yi, Sima Shi, and Sima Zhao are only found in the following standard history Book of Jin by the Tang dynasty historian Fang Xuanling.

The legitimacy issue

Traditional Chinese political thought is concerned with the concept of the "Mandate of Heaven", from which a ruler derives legitimacy to rule all under heaven. In the Three Kingdoms period, Cao Wei, Shu Han, and Eastern Wu all laid claim to the Mandate by virtue of their founders declaring themselves as emperors. Later historians would disagree on which of the Three Kingdoms (primarily between Wei and Shu) should be considered the sole legitimate successor to the Han dynasty.

Chen Shou, the compiler of the Records of the Three Kingdoms, hailed from Shu Han and became an official of the Western Jin dynasty when he was working on the Records. As Western Jin succeeded Cao Wei, Chen was careful in his compilation to imply Cao Wei was the legitimate state. Despite the description of events being mostly balanced and fair,[72] Chen Shou legitimized Wei by placing the Wei annals first, using the era names from Wei's calendar, and reserving regal nomenclature for the leaders of Wei. Specifically, emperors of Cao Wei are referred to by their imperial posthumous names (eg. Cao Pi is referred to as the "Civil Emperor" 文帝), while the Shu and Wu emperors are mere "rulers" (eg. Liu Bei is referred to as the "First Ruler" 先主 and Sun Quan as "Ruler of Wu" 吳主).[70] Chen Shou, as a subject of Jin, could not write in a way that implies Jin as illegitimate by denying Cao Wei's claim to the mandate, despite what sympathies he might have had toward his home state of Shu.[73]

Chen Shou's treatment of the legitimacy issue was generally accepted through to the Northern Song dynasty. Despite maintaining that none of the three states truly held the Mandate of Heaven since they all failed to unify China, Song historian Sima Guang used Wei's era names and thus affirmed the legitimacy of Wei's succession to Han in his universal history Zizhi Tongjian.[74] Sima Guang explained that his choice was merely out of convenience, and he was "not honouring one and treating another with contempt, nor making distinction between orthodox and intercalary positions."[74] Nonetheless, the influential Neo-Confucian moralist Zhu Xi criticized Sima Guang's choice, taking the position that Shu Han was the true successor to the Han dynasty since Liu Bei was related to the imperial Liu clan by blood, and thus used Shu's calendar in his rewrite of Sima Guang's work, the Zizhi Tongjian Gangmu.[75] This position, first argued by Xi Zuochi in the fourth century,[76] found support in Zhu Xi's time since the Song dynasty found itself in a similar situation as Shu Han, as it was forced out of north China by the Jurchens in 1127 and became known as the Southern Song.[77] The revisionist private histories of the time emphasized "humane governence" (仁政) as a mark of legitimate dynastic succession, and saw Liu Bei as an idealized Confucian monarch.[78] The pro-Shu bias then found its way into popular forms of entertainment such as pinghua tales and zaju performances, and was eventually codified in the 14th century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.[79]

Legacy in popular culture

Numerous people and affairs from the period later became Chinese legends. The most complete and influential example is the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, written by Luo Guanzhong during the Ming dynasty. Possibly due to the popularity of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the Three Kingdoms era is one of the most well-known non-modern Chinese eras in terms of iconic characters, deeds and exploits. This is reflected in the way that fictional accounts of the Three Kingdoms, mostly based on the novel, play a significant role in East Asian popular culture. Books, television dramas, films, cartoons, anime, games, and music on the topic are still regularly produced in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam, Japan, and Southeast Asia.[80]

Japanese video game developer Koei (later merged with Tecmo to form Koei Tecmo) introduced multiple generations of young gamers in the West to the Three Kingdoms era through its retelling of the history across its long and successful franchises of Romance of the Three Kingdoms strategy games and Dynasty Warriors action games. The games evoked a fascination with the period among many Western players, similar to the interest stoked among East Asians by local pop culture and media, albeit to a less prevalent and intense extent in the West.[81][82]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Referring to the Han dynasty government; the word 蒼, here glossed as grey, is specifically the colour of an old person's hair, alluding to the decrepit state of the Han
  2. ^ Referring to the Yellow Turban Rebellion
  3. ^ Jiazi is the first step of the sexagenary cycle, signifying a new beginning
  4. ^ Book of HanRecord of Emperor Xiaoling and the Zizhi Tongjian -Guanghe Year 6 record that Zhang Jiao declared himself Yellow Emperor and took their movement's name from a headscarf worn by followers [yellow signifying the Yellow Emperor and imperial authority].
  5. ^ Roughly covering the Sichuan Basin
  6. ^ The area between present-day Baoding and Taiyuan
  7. ^ Earlier, in 217, Sima Yi had become a member of the heir apparent Cao Pi's entourage. He steadily rose in position during Cao Pi's reign. (Crespigny 1991,31)

References

  1. ^ Theobald (2000).
  2. ^ Kang, Youwei (21 October 2013). 歐洲十一國遊記二種 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 群出版. p. 98.
  3. ^ "History of Three Kingdoms Period - China Education Center". www.chinaeducenter.com.
  4. ^ Dreyer, Edward L. 2009. “Military Aspects of the War of the Eight Princes, 300–307.” In Military Culture in Imperial China, edited by Nicola Di Cosmo. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 112–142. ISBN 978-0674031098.
  5. ^ Hans Bielenstein. Chinese historical demography A.D. 2-1982. Östasiatiska museet. p 17
  6. ^ Breverton, Terry (2013). Breverton's Encyclopedia of Inventions (Unabridged ed.). Quercus. ISBN 978-1623652340.
  7. ^ Szczepanski, Kallie. "The Invention of the Crossbow". About.com. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  8. ^ Hong-Sen Yan (2007). Reconstruction Designs of Lost Ancient Chinese Machinery (Online-Ausg. ed.). Dordrecht: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 129. ISBN 978-1402064609.
  9. ^ Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2009). Historical Dictionary of Medieval China. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. p. 351. ISBN 978-0810860537.
  10. ^ 佚名 (January 2013). Chinese History. ISBN 9781921678882.
  11. ^ "Romance of the Three Kingdoms: China's Greatest Epic 三國志演義". Yellow Bridge. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  12. ^ Tanner, Harold Miles (13 March 2009). China: A History. Indianapolis, Indiana: Hackett Publishing. pp. 141–142. ISBN 978-0872209152.
  13. ^ Guo Jian (郭建) (1999). 千秋興亡 [Rise and Fall over Thousands of Autumns]. Changchun: 長春出版社 (Changchun Press).
  14. ^ Jiang Lang (姜狼) (2011). 184–280:三國原來這樣 [184–280: It Turns out the Three Kingdoms Were like This]. Beijing: 現代出版社 (Modern Press).
  15. ^ Han Guopan (韓國磐) (1983). 魏晉南北朝史綱 [Historical Highlights of the Six Dynasties]. Beijing: 人民出版社 (People's Press).
  16. ^ Zhang Binsheng (張儐生) (1982). 魏晉南北朝政治史 [Administrative History of the Six Dynasties]. Taipei: 中國文化大學 (Chinese Culture University Press).
  17. ^ Gao Min (高敏), ed. (1998). 中國經濟通史 魏晉南北朝經濟卷 [The Complete Economic History of China: Economy of the Six Dynasties]. Hong Kong: 經濟日報出版社 (Economics Daily Press).
  18. ^ Luo Kun (羅琨); et al. (1998). 中國軍事通史 三國軍事史 [The Complete Military History of China: Three Kingdoms Military History]. Beijing: 軍事科學出版社 (Military Science Press).
  19. ^ Zhu Dawei (朱大渭); et al. (1998). 魏晉南北朝社會生活史 [The Social History of the Six Dynasties]. Beijing: 中國社會科學出版社 (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences).
  20. ^ Zhang Wenqiang (張文強) (1994). 中國魏晉南北朝軍事史 [China's Six Dynasties Military History]. Beijing: 人民出版社 (People's Press).
  21. ^ Zhang Chengzong (張承宗); Wei Xiangdong (魏向東) (2001). 中國風俗通史 魏晉南北朝卷 [The Complete History of Chinese Customs: Six Dynasties]. Shanghai: 上海藝文出版社 (Shanghai People's Press).
  22. ^ He Dezhang (何德章) (1994). 中國魏晉南北朝政治史 (百卷本國全史第7) [China's Six Dynasties Administrative History (This Nation's Total History in 100 Volumes, no 7)]. Beijing: 人民出版社 (People's Press).
  23. ^ Wang Lihua (王利華); et al. (2009). 中國農業通史 魏晉南北朝卷 [The Complete History of Chinese Agriculture: Six Dynasties]. Beijing: 中國農業出版社 (Chinese Agricultural Press).
  24. ^ a b c Roberts, Moss (1991). Three Kingdoms: A Historical Novel. California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22503-1.
  25. ^ Wilkinson, Endymion (2000). Chinese history: A manual (Revised and enlarged ed.). Cambridge: Harvard University, Asia Center for the Harvard-Yenching Institute. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-674-00249-4.
  26. ^ Theobald, Ulrich (28 June 2011). "The Yellow Turban Uprising". Chinaknowledge. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  27. ^ a b c de Crespigny 1991, 1.
  28. ^ a b de Crespigny 1991, 1–2.
  29. ^ a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991, 2.
  30. ^ a b c de Crespigny 1991, 2–3.
  31. ^ (守尸吏暝以為大炷,置卓臍中以為灯,光明達旦,如是積日。) According to the Annal of Heroes, the light from his corpse could be compared to that of the sun!
  32. ^ a b de Crespigny 1991, 3–4.
  33. ^ a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991, 3.
  34. ^ a b c d e de Crespigny 1991, 6.
  35. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 988.
  36. ^ a b de Crespigny 1991, 7–8.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h de Crespigny 1991, 7.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h de Crespigny 1991, 4.
  39. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 4 & 6.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q de Crespigny 1991, 8.
  41. ^ a b c d de Crespigny 1991, 21.
  42. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 8 & 21.
  43. ^ a b de Crespigny 1991, 9.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j de Crespigny 1991, 10.
  45. ^ a b c d de Crespigny 1991, 10–11 & 21–22.
  46. ^ a b c de Crespigny 1991, 10–11.
  47. ^ a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991, 11.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n de Crespigny 1991, 12.
  49. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 11–12.
  50. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 12–13.
  51. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 13 & 20.
  52. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 12–13 & 22.
  53. ^ a b de Crespigny 1991, 22.
  54. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 13 & 16.
  55. ^ de Crespigny 1991, 16.
  56. ^ a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991, 13.
  57. ^ Taylor, Keith Weller (1 April 1991). "The Birth of Vietnam". University of California Press – via Google Books.
  58. ^ Taylor 1983, p. 70.
  59. ^ a b c de Crespigny 1991, 31.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i j de Crespigny 1991, 32.
  61. ^ Byington, Mark E. Journal of Northeast Asian History volume 4, number 1 (June 2007):93.
  62. ^ Williams, R. Owen (November 2006). Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition [Two Volumes]. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-01524-3.
  63. ^ From Zou Jiwan (Chinese: 鄒紀萬), Zhongguo Tongshi – Weijin Nanbeichao Shi 中國通史·魏晉南北朝史, (1992).
  64. ^ "China has been plagued, and shaped, by epidemics – it has also overcome them". South China Morning Post. 21 December 2021.
  65. ^ Mazanec, Thomas J. (1 September 2020). "Review: The Halberd at Red Cliff: Jian'an and the Three Kingdoms, by Xiaofei Tian". Studies in Late Antiquity. 4 (3): 353–359. doi:10.1525/sla.2020.4.3.353. ISSN 2470-6469. S2CID 225333779.
  66. ^ de Crespigny, Rafe (November 2003). . Australian National University. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 January 2015.
  67. ^ Burton Watson (1971). Chinese Lyricism:: Shih Poetry from the Second to the Twelfth Century. Columbia University Press. p. 38. ISBN 0-231-03464-4.
  68. ^ Knechtges (2010), p. 174.
  69. ^ Cutter & Crowell 1999, p. 149.
  70. ^ a b McLaren 2006, p. 294.
  71. ^ de Crespigny 2020, p. xi.
  72. ^ McLaren 2012, p. 46 note 14.
  73. ^ Cutter & Crowell 1999, p. 71.
  74. ^ a b de Crespigny 2018, p. 353.
  75. ^ Mansvelt Beck 1986, pp. 374–375.
  76. ^ McLaren 2012, p. 53 note 41.
  77. ^ McLaren 2006, pp. 295–296.
  78. ^ McLaren 2006, p. 302.
  79. ^ McLaren 2012, p. 46.
  80. ^ Craig J. Reynolds. Seditious Histories: Contesting Thai and Southeast Asian Pasts, Washington: University of Washington Press, 2006.
  81. ^ "How Creative Assembly and Koei Tecmo bring the Romance of the Three Kingdoms to life". 19 February 2020.
  82. ^ Rian E. Johnson (May 2020). Enemy Officer Defeated: The Dynasty Warriors Series within the Spheres of Three Kingdoms and Videogames (MA). doi:10.13140/RG.2.2.25414.09281 – via ResearchGate.

Bibliography

  • Bielenstein, Hans (1947), "The census of China during the period 2–742 A.D.", Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 19: 125–163
  • Cutter, Robert Joe; Crowell, William Gordon (1999). Empresses and consorts : selections from Chen Shou's Records of the Three States with Pei Songzhi's commentary. Honolulu: University of Hawaiì Press. ISBN 0-585-32007-1. OCLC 45843016.
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (1991). "The Three Kingdoms and Western Jin: A History of China in the Third Century AD ~ I" (PDF). East Asian History. 1 (1).
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2007), A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms, Brill
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2018) [1990]. Generals of the South: the foundation and early history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu (Internet ed.). Faculty of Asian Studies, The Australian National University.
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2020) [1996]. To Establish Peace: being the Chronicle of the Later Han dynasty for the years 189 to 200 AD as recorded in Chapters 59 to 63 of the Zizhi tongjian of Sima Guang (Internet ed.). Australia Centre on China in the World, The Australian National University. hdl:1885/212581. ISBN 978-0-7315-2537-9.
  • Ge Jianxiong, 中国人口史 (History of the Population of China) vol 1. Shanghai: Fudan University Press, 2002. ISBN 7-309-03520-8
  • Knechtges, David R. (2010). "From the Eastern Han Through the Western Jin (AD 25-317)". In Kang-yi Sun Chang; Stephen Owen (eds.). The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 116–198. ISBN 9780521855587.
  • Mansvelt Beck, B. J. (1986), Twitchett, Denis; Loewe, Michael (eds.), "The fall of Han", The Cambridge History of China: Volume 1: The Ch'in and Han Empires, 221 BC–AD 220, The Cambridge History of China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, vol. 1, pp. 317–376, doi:10.1017/chol9780521243278.007, ISBN 978-0-521-24327-8, retrieved 17 November 2020
  • McLaren, Anne E. (2006). "History Repackaged in the Age of Print: The "Sanguozhi" and "Sanguo yanyi"". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 69 (2): 293–313. doi:10.1017/S0041977X06000139. ISSN 0041-977X. JSTOR 20182040. S2CID 154489082.
  • McLaren, Anne E. (2012). "Writing History, Writing Fiction: The Remaking of Cao Cao in Song Historiography". Monumenta Serica. 60 (1): 45–69. doi:10.1179/mon.2012.60.1.003. ISSN 0254-9948. S2CID 193917398.
  • San, Tan Koon (2014), Dynastic China: An Elemental History, The Other Press, ISBN 978-9839541885
  • Taylor, Jay (1983), The Birth of the Vietnamese, University of California Press
  • Theobald, Ulrich (2000), "Chinese History – Three Kingdoms 三國 (220–280)", Chinaknowledge, retrieved 7 July 2015

Further reading

  • Sima, Guang (1952). The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms (220–265) Chapters 69–78 from the Tz*U Chih T'ung Chien. translated by Achilles Fang, Glen William Baxter and Bernard S. Solomon. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Hill, John E. 2004. The Peoples of the West from the Weilue 魏略 by Yu Huan 魚豢: A Third Century Chinese Account Composed between 239 and 265. University of Washington, Draft annotated English translation.

External links

    Preceded by Dynasties in Chinese history
    220–280
    Succeeded by

    three, kingdoms, this, article, about, time, period, china, other, uses, disambiguation, simplified, chinese, 三国, traditional, chinese, 三國, pinyin, sān, guó, from, tripartite, division, china, among, dynastic, states, eastern, period, preceded, eastern, dynast. This article is about the time period in China For other uses see Three Kingdoms disambiguation The Three Kingdoms simplified Chinese 三国 traditional Chinese 三國 pinyin San Guo from 220 to 280 AD was the tripartite division of China among the dynastic states of Cao Wei Shu Han and Eastern Wu 1 The Three Kingdoms period was preceded by the Eastern Han dynasty and was followed by the Western Jin dynasty The short lived state of Yan on the Liaodong Peninsula which lasted from 237 to 238 is sometimes considered as a 4th kingdom 2 Three Kingdoms period三國時代220 280 ADTime lapse of the various conquests and territorial changes before and during the Three Kingdoms era LocationMainland China East AsiaKey eventsEnd of the Han dynasty 189 220 Main Three Kingdoms period 220 280 Battle of Chibi 208 Battle of Yiling 221 222 Three KingdomsChinese nameTraditional Chinese三國Simplified Chinese三国Hanyu PinyinSanguoLiteral meaning three states TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinSanguoBopomofoㄙㄢ ㄍㄨㄛˊGwoyeu RomatzyhSangwoWade GilesSan1 kuo2Tongyong PinyinSanguoYale RomanizationSangwoIPA sa n kwo WuShanghaineseRomanizationSae koq Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationSaamgwokJyutpingSaam1gwok3IPA saːm kʷɔːk Vietnamese nameVietnameseTam QuốcHan Nom三國Korean nameHangul삼국Hanja三國TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationSamgukJapanese nameHiraganaさんごくKyujitai三國Shinjitai三国TranscriptionsRomanizationSangokuThree Kingdoms periodChinese nameTraditional Chinese三國時代Simplified Chinese三国时代TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinSanguo ShidaiBopomofoㄙㄢ ㄍㄨㄛˊ ㄕˊ ㄉㄞˋGwoyeu RomatzyhSangwo ShyrdayWade GilesSan1 kuo2 Shih2 tai4Tongyong PinyinSanguo ShihdaiYale RomanizationSangwo ShŕdaiIPA sa n kwo ʂɻ ta ɪ WuRomanizationSẽ kueʔ sy deYue CantoneseYale RomanizationSaamgwok SihdoihJyutpingSaam1gwok3 Si4doi6IPA saːm kʷɔːk siː tɔːy Vietnamese nameVietnameseTam Quốc thời đạiHan Nom三國時代Korean nameHangul삼국 시대Hanja三國時代TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationSamguk sidaeJapanese nameHiraganaさんごくじだいKyujitai三國時代Shinjitai三国時代TranscriptionsRomanizationSangokujidaiAcademically the period of the Three Kingdoms refers to the period between the establishment of Cao Wei in 220 and the conquest of the Eastern Wu by the Western Jin in 280 The earlier unofficial part of the period from 184 to 220 was marked by chaotic infighting between warlords in various parts of China during the downfall of the Eastern Han dynasty The middle part of the period from 220 to 263 was marked by a more militarily stable arrangement between three rival states of Cao Wei Shu Han and Eastern Wu The later part of the era was marked by the conquest of Shu by Wei in 263 the usurpation of Cao Wei by the Western Jin in 266 and the conquest of Eastern Wu by the Western Jin in 280 The Three Kingdoms period is one of the bloodiest in Chinese history 3 A nationwide census taken in 280 AD following the reunification of the Three Kingdoms under the Jin shows a total of 2 459 840 households and 16 163 863 individuals which was only a fraction of the 10 677 960 households and 56 486 856 individuals reported during the Han era 4 While the census may not have been particularly accurate due to a multitude of factors of the times in 280 the Jin did make an attempt to account for all individuals where they could 5 Technology advanced significantly during this period Shu chancellor Zhuge Liang invented the wooden ox suggested to be an early form of the wheelbarrow 6 and improved on the repeating crossbow 7 Wei mechanical engineer Ma Jun is considered by many to be the equal of his predecessor Zhang Heng 8 He invented a hydraulic powered mechanical puppet theatre designed for Emperor Ming of Wei square pallet chain pumps for irrigation of gardens in Luoyang and the ingenious design of the south pointing chariot a non magnetic directional compass operated by differential gears 9 Although relatively short this historical period has been greatly romanticized in the cultures of China Japan Korea and Vietnam 10 It has been celebrated and popularized in operas folk stories novels and in more recent times films television and video games The best known of these is Luo Guanzhong s Romance of the Three Kingdoms a Ming dynasty historical novel based on events in the Three Kingdoms period 11 The authoritative historical record of the era is Chen Shou s Records of the Three Kingdoms along with Pei Songzhi s later annotations of the text The English language term Three Kingdoms is something of a misnomer since each state was eventually headed not by a king but by an emperor who claimed suzerainty over all China 12 Nevertheless the term Three Kingdoms has become standard among English speaking sinologists Contents 1 Periodization 2 History 2 1 Yellow Turban Rebellion 2 2 Dong Zhuo in power 2 3 Collapse of central power 2 3 1 Xu and Yan provinces 2 3 2 Huai River 2 3 3 Emperor Xian s fate 2 3 4 North China Plain 2 3 5 South of the Yangtze 2 3 6 Jing Province 2 3 7 Battle of Red Cliffs 2 4 Final years of the dynasty 2 5 Emergence of the Three Kingdoms 2 6 The Three States 2 6 1 Shu 2 6 2 Wu 2 6 3 Wei 2 7 Decline and End 2 7 1 Fall of Shu 2 7 2 Fall of Wei 2 7 3 Fall of Wu 3 Impact 3 1 Population 3 2 Economy 4 Literature 5 Historiography 5 1 Sources 5 2 The legitimacy issue 6 Legacy in popular culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksPeriodization EditSee also Timeline of the Three Kingdoms period There is no set time period for the era The majority view uses the years 220 280 as endpoints beginning with the abdication of the last Han emperor and ending with the reunification of China by the first Jin emperor Strictly speaking the Three Kingdoms or independent states only existed from the proclamation of the Eastern Wu ruler to be emperor in 229 until the downfall of Shu Han in 263 Interpretations of the period outside performative political acts push the beginning back into the later years of the Han with the decline of the Han royal house Several other starting points for the period are given by Chinese historians the Yellow Turban Rebellion in 184 13 14 the year after the beginning of the rebellion 185 15 Dong Zhuo deposing Emperor Shao of Han and enthroning Emperor Xian of Han in 189 16 17 Dong Zhuo sacking Luoyang and moving the capital to Chang an in 190 18 or Cao Cao placing the emperor under his control in Xuchang in 196 19 20 21 22 23 Mao Zonggang a commentator on the Romance of the Three Kingdoms suggests that the historiography of the Three Kingdoms began with the rise of the Ten Eunuchs In his commentary on Chapter 120 of the novel Mao states The three kingdoms formed when the Han royal house declined The Han royal house declined when the eunuchs abused the sovereign and officials subverted the government 24 He further argues that the Romance of the Three Kingdoms defines the end of the era as 280 the downfall of Wu justifying As the novel focuses on Han it could have ended with the fall of Han But Wei usurped Han To end the tale before Han s enemy had itself met its fate would be to leave the reader unsatisfied The novel could have ended with the fall of Wei but Han s ally was Wu To end the tale before Han s ally had fallen would be to leave the reader with an incomplete picture So the tale had to end with the fall of Wu 24 As the Jin unification was itself short lived the entire period between the fall of Han and the Sui unification 220 589 is sometimes periodized together as the period of disunity Wei Jin Northern and Southern dynasties or even Northern and Southern dynasties alone though that more commonly means 420 589 between Jin and Sui or the Six Dynasties period 24 25 History EditSee also Military history of the Three Kingdoms Yellow Turban Rebellion Edit Main article Yellow Turban Rebellion Map of Chinese provinces in the prelude of Three Kingdom period In the late Han dynasty period 189 AD Map showing the Yellow Turban Rebellion in Eastern Han Dynasty of China The power of the Eastern Han dynasty went into depression and steadily declined from a variety of political and economic problems after the death of Emperor He in 105 AD A series of Han emperors ascended the throne while still youths and de facto imperial power often rested with the emperors older relatives As these relatives occasionally were loath to give up their influence emperors would upon reaching maturity be forced to rely on political alliances with senior officials and eunuchs to achieve control of the government Political posturing and infighting between imperial relatives and eunuch officials were a constant problem in the Chinese government at the time 26 During the reigns of Emperor Huan r 146 168 and Emperor Ling r 168 189 leading officials dissatisfaction with the eunuchs usurpations of power reached a peak and many began to openly protest against them The first and second protests met with failure and the court eunuchs persuaded the emperor to execute many of the protesting scholars Some local rulers seized the opportunity to exert despotic control over their lands and citizens since many feared to speak out in the oppressive political climate Emperors Huan and Ling s reigns were recorded as particularly dark periods of Han dynasty rule In addition to political oppression and mismanagement China experienced a number of natural disasters during this period and local rebellions sprung up throughout the country In the third month of 184 Zhang Jiao leader of the Way of Supreme Peace a Taoist movement along with his two brothers Zhang Liang and Zhang Bao led the movement s followers in a rebellion against the government that was called the Yellow Turban Rebellion Their movement quickly attracted followers and soon numbered several hundred thousand and received support from many parts of China They had 36 bases throughout China with large bases having 10 000 or more followers and minor bases having 6 000 to 7 000 similar to Han armies Their motto was The Grey Sky a has perished the Yellow Sky b will soon rise in this year of jiazi c let there be prosperity in the world 蒼天已死 黃天當立 歲在甲子 天下大吉 d Emperor Ling dispatched generals Huangfu Song Lu Zhi and Zhu Jun to lead the Han armies against the rebels and decreed that local governments had to supply soldiers to assist in their efforts It is at this point that the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms begins its narrative The Yellow Turbans were ultimately defeated and its surviving followers dispersed throughout China but due to the turbulent situation throughout the empire many were able to survive as bandits in mountainous areas thus continuing their ability to contribute to the turmoil of the era With the widespread increase in bandits across the Chinese nation the Han army had no way to repel each and every raiding party In 188 Emperor Ling accepted a memorial from Liu Yan suggesting he grant direct administrative power over feudal provinces and direct command of regional military to local governors as well as promoting them in rank and filling such positions with members of the Liu family or court officials This move made provinces zhou official administrative units and although they had power to combat rebellions the later intra governmental chaos allowed these local governors to easily rule independently of the central government Liu Yan was also promoted as governor of Yi Province e Soon after this move Liu Yan severed all of his region s ties to the Han imperial court and several other areas followed suit Dong Zhuo in power Edit In the same year Emperor Ling died and another struggle began between the court eunuchs for control of the imperial family Court eunuch Jian Shuo planned to kill Regent Marshal He Jin a relative of the imperial family and to replace the crown prince Liu Bian with his younger brother Liu Xie the Prince of Chenliu in present day Kaifeng though his plan was unsuccessful Liu Bian took the Han throne as Emperor Shao and He Jin plotted with warlord Yuan Shao to assassinate the Ten Attendants a clique of twelve eunuchs led by Zhang Rang who controlled much of the imperial court He Jin also ordered Dong Zhuo the frontier general in Liang Province and Ding Yuan Inspector of Bing Province f to bring troops to the capital to reinforce his position of authority The eunuchs learned of He Jin s plot and had him assassinated before Dong Zhuo reached the capital Luoyang When Yuan Shao s troops reached Luoyang they stormed the palace complex killing the Ten Attendants and 2 000 of the eunuchs supporters Though this move effectively ended the century long feud between the eunuchs and the imperial family this event prompted the invitation of Dong Zhuo to the outskirts of Luoyang from the northwest boundary of China On the evening of 24 September 189 General Dong Zhuo observed that Luoyang was set ablaze as a result of a power struggle between the eunuchs and civil service and commanded his army forward to strike down the disorder 27 As the emperor had lost any remaining military or political power Dong Zhuo seized the de facto control of the government located at Luoyang 27 On 28 September Dong Zhuo deposed Liu Bian from the imperial Han throne in favour of Liu Xie 27 In the following weeks rebellions broke out throughout all of China 28 In East China in an attempt to restore the power of the Han a large coalition against Dong Zhuo began to rise with leaders such as Yuan Shao Yuan Shu and Cao Cao 28 Many provincial officials were compelled to join or risk elimination 29 In 191 Sun Jian Yuan Shu s subordinate led an army against Dong Zhuo and drove him from Luoyang to Chang an 30 In the following year 192 Lu Bu Dong Zhuo s former bodyguard assassinated Dong Zhuo 29 It is said that Dong Zhuo s body was thrown into the street with a lit wick in his navel which supposedly burned with the same brilliance of the sun for a period of four days 31 Collapse of central power Edit In 192 there was some talk among the coalition of appointing Liu Yu an imperial relative as emperor and gradually its members began to fall out Most of the warlords in the coalition with a few exceptions sought the increase of personal military power in the time of instability instead of seriously wishing to restore the Han dynasty s authority The Han empire was divided between a number of regional warlords As a result of the complete collapse of the central government and eastern alliance the North China Plain fell into warfare and anarchy with many contenders vying for success or survival 29 Emperor Xian fell into the hands of various warlords in Chang an Dong Zhuo confident in his success was slain by his follower Lu Bu who plotted with minister Wang Yun Lu Bu in turn was attacked by Dong Zhuo s former officers Li Jue Guo Si Zhang Ji and Fan Chou Wang Yun and his whole family were executed Lu Bu fled to Zhang Yang a northern warlord and remained with him for a time before briefly joining Yuan Shao but it was clear that Lu Bu was far too independent to serve another Yuan Shao operated from Ye city in Ji Province extending his power north of the Yellow River 29 Han Fu had formerly been the Governor of Ji Province but he came under the control of Yuan Shao and was replaced by him 30 Between the Yellow and Huai rivers a conflict had erupted between Yuan Shu Cao Cao Tao Qian Governor of Xu Province and Lu Bu 29 Cao Cao forced the Yellow Turbans to surrender in 192 32 drove Yuan Shu to the south of the Huai River in 193 29 inflicted devastation upon Tao Qian in 194 30 received the surrender of Liu Bei then a commander under Tao Qian in 196 33 and captured and executed Lu Bu in 198 33 Cao was now in complete control of the southern part of the North China Plain 33 In the northeast Gongsun Du held control of the Liaodong Peninsula and its environs where he had established a state 34 He was succeeded by his son Gongsun Kang in 204 34 In the north across the frontier since the fall of imperial control the region had become chaotic as the Xiongnu remnants came into conflict with the Xianbei 34 Goguryeo was invaded by warlord Gongsun Kang in 204 resulting in the Daifang Commandery In 209 Kang invaded Goguryeo again took the capital of Goguryeo and forced them to submit Goguryeo was forced to move its capital further east 35 In Liang Province present day Gansu rebellion had erupted in 184 34 In the west Liu Yan had been Governor of Yi Province since his appointment in 188 36 He was succeeded by his son Liu Zhang in 194 36 Directly north of Liu Zhang s territory Zhang Lu leader of the Five Pecks of Rice led a theocratic government at Hanzhong commandery on the upper Han River 37 Liu Biao held control over his province as the Governor of Jing Province 37 Sun Quan held control over the lower Yangtze 37 Xu and Yan provinces Edit In 194 Cao Cao went to war with Tao Qian of Xu Province because Tao s subordinate Zhang Kai had murdered Cao Cao s father Cao Song Tao Qian received the support of Liu Bei and Gongsun Zan but even then it seemed as if Cao Cao s superior forces would overrun Xu Province entirely Cao Cao received word that Lu Bu had seized Yan Province in his absence and accordingly he retreated putting a halt to hostilities with Tao Qian for the time being Tao Qian died in the same year leaving his province to Liu Bei A year later in 195 Cao Cao managed to drive Lu Bu out of Yan Province Lu Bu fled to Xu Province and was received by Liu Bei and an uneasy alliance began between the two Afterwards Lu Bu betrayed Liu Bei and seized Xu Province forming an alliance with Yuan Shu s remnant forces Liu Bei together with his followers Guan Yu and Zhang Fei fled to Cao Cao who accepted him Soon preparations were made for an attack on Lu Bu and the combined forces of Cao Cao and Liu Bei invaded Xu Province Lu Bu s men deserted him Yuan Shu s forces never arrived as reinforcements and he was bound by his own subordinates Song Xian 宋憲 and Wei Xu 魏續 and executed on Cao Cao s order Huai River Edit Main article Campaign against Yuan Shu Yuan Shu after being driven south in 193 established himself at his new capital Shouchun present day Anhui 33 He attempted to regain lost territory north of the Huai River 33 In 197 Yuan Shu declared himself emperor of his own dynasty 33 The move was a strategic blunder as it drew the ire of many warlords across the land including Yuan Shu s own subordinates who almost all abandoned him 32 Abandoned by almost all his allies and followers he perished in 199 38 Emperor Xian s fate Edit In August 195 Emperor Xian fled the tyranny of Li Jue at Chang an and made a year long hazardous journey east in search of supporters In 196 Emperor Xian came under the protection and control of Cao Cao after he had succeeded in fleeing from the warlords of Chang an 38 Establishing the imperial court at Xuchang in Henan Cao Cao who now held the de facto control rigorously followed the formalities of the court and justified his actions as a loyal minister of the Han 38 By then most of the smaller contenders for power had either been absorbed by larger ones or destroyed This was an extremely important move for Cao Cao following the suggestion from his primary adviser Xun Yu commenting that by supporting the authentic emperor Cao Cao would have the formal legal authority to control the other warlords and force them to comply in order to restore the Han dynasty North China Plain Edit Cao Cao whose zone of control was the precursor to the state of Cao Wei had raised an army in 189 In several strategic movements and battles he controlled Yan Province and defeated several factions of the Yellow Turban rebels This earned him the aid of other local militaries controlled by Zhang Miao and Chen Gong who joined his cause to create his first sizeable army He continued the effort and absorbed approximately 300 000 Yellow Turban rebels into his army as well as a number of clan based military groups from the eastern side of Qing Province Since 192 He developed military agricultural colonies tuntian to support his army Although the system imposed a heavy tax on hired civilian farmers 40 to 60 of agricultural production the farmers were more than pleased to be able to work with relative stability and professional military protection in a time of chaos This was later said to be his second important policy for success In 200 Dong Cheng an imperial relative received a secret edict from Emperor Xian to assassinate Cao Cao He collaborated with Liu Bei on this effort but Cao Cao soon found out about the plot and had Dong Cheng and his conspirators executed with only Liu Bei surviving and fleeing to join Yuan Shao in the north After settling the nearby provinces including a rebellion led by former Yellow Turbans and internal affairs with the court Cao Cao turned his attention north to Yuan Shao who himself had eliminated his northern rival Gongsun Zan that same year Yuan Shao himself of higher nobility than Cao Cao amassed a large army and camped along the northern bank of the Yellow River In the summer of 200 after months of preparations the armies of Cao Cao and Yuan Shao clashed at the Battle of Guandu near present day Kaifeng 38 Cao Cao s army was heavily outnumbered by Yuan Shao 38 Due to a raid in Yuan s supply train Yuan s army fell into disorder as they fled back north 38 Cao Cao took advantage of Yuan Shao s death in 202 which resulted in division among his sons and advanced to the north 38 In 204 after the Battle of Ye Cao Cao captured the city of Ye 38 By the end of 207 after a victorious campaign beyond the frontier against the Wuhuan culminating in the Battle of White Wolf Mountain Cao Cao achieved complete dominance of the North China Plain 39 He now controlled China s heartland including Yuan Shao s former territory and half of the Chinese population 34 South of the Yangtze Edit In 193 Huang Zu led the forces of Liu Biao in a campaign against Sun Jian Yuan Shu s subordinate general and killed him 40 In 194 Sun Ce aged 18 came into the military service under Yuan Shu 37 He was given the command of some troops who formerly had been commanded by his late father Sun Jian 37 In the south he defeated the warlords of Yang Province including Liu Yao Wang Lang and Yan Baihu In 198 Sun Ce aged 23 declared his independence from Yuan Shu who recently had declared himself emperor 37 He held control over Danyang Wu and Kuaiji commanderies from present day Nanjing to the Hangzhou Bay and some outposts at the Fujian coast while expanding westward in a series of campaigns 37 By 200 he had conquered Yuzhang commandery at present day Lake Poyang in Jiangxi and Lujiang north of the Yangtze 37 In 200 Sun Ce was ambushed and assassinated by the former retainers of a defeated rival from Wu 40 Sun Quan aged 18 succeeded him and quickly established his authority 40 By 203 he was expanding westward 40 In 208 Sun Quan defeated Huang Zu Liu Biao s subordinate commander around present day Wuhan 40 He now held control over the territories south of the Yangtze below Wuhan Poyang region and Hangzhou Bay 40 His navy established local superiority over the Yangtze 40 Nevertheless he would soon come under the threat of Cao Cao s larger armies 40 Jing Province Edit During Dong Zhuo s reign over the Han government Liu Biao had been appointed as the Governor of Jing Province 40 His territory was located around his capital Xiangyang and the territory to the south around the Han and Yangtze River 40 Beyond his eastern border was the territory of Sun Quan 40 In 200 during the time of the campaign around Guandu between Cao Cao and Yuan Shao Liu Bei s forces had been defeated by a detachment of Cao Cao s army forcing Liu Bei to flee and seek refuge with Liu Biao in Jing Province 41 In this exile Liu Bei maintained his followers who had accompanied him and made new connections within Liu Biao s entourage 41 It was during this time that Liu Bei also met Zhuge Liang 41 In the autumn of 208 Liu Biao died and was succeeded by his youngest son Liu Cong over the eldest son Liu Qi through political maneuvering 40 Liu Bei had become the head of the opposition to a surrender when Cao Cao s army marched southward to Jing 41 After the advice of his supporters Liu Cong surrendered to Cao Cao 40 Cao Cao took control of the province and began appointing scholars and officials from Liu Biao s court to the local government 40 Meanwhile Liu Qi had joined Liu Bei to establish a line of defence at the Yangtze River against the surrender to Cao Cao but they suffered defeat at the hands of Cao Cao 42 In the aftermath they retreated and sought support from Sun Quan 40 Guan Yu Liu Bei s subordinate lieutenant had managed to retrieve most of Jing Province s fleet from the Han River 40 Cao Cao occupied the naval base at Jiangling on the Yangtze River 40 He would now begin proceeding eastwards towards Sun Quan with his armies and new fleet while sending messengers to demand Sun Quan s surrender 43 Battle of Red Cliffs Edit Main article Battle of Red Cliffs In 208 Cao Cao marched south with his army hoping to quickly unify the empire Liu Biao s son Liu Cong surrendered Jing Province and Cao was able to capture a sizable fleet at Jiangling Sun Quan the successor to Sun Ce in the lower Yangtze continued to resist His advisor Lu Su secured an alliance with Liu Bei himself a recent refugee from the north and Zhou Yu was placed in command of Sun Quan s navy along with a veteran general who served the Sun family Cheng Pu Liu Biao s second son Liu Qi joined the alliance with his troops and the combined armies of 50 000 met Cao Cao s fleet and 200 000 strong force at Red Cliffs that winter After an initial skirmish an attack was set in motion beginning with a plan to set fire to Cao Cao s immobilized fleet through the feigned surrender of Sun Quan s general Huang Gai Cao Cao was defeated decisively and forced to retreat in disarray back to the north The allied victory at Red Cliffs ensured the survival of Liu Bei and Sun Quan and provided the basis for the states of Shu and Wu Final years of the dynasty Edit Provinces and commanderies in the penultimate year of the Han dynasty 219 AD In 209 Zhou Yu captured Jiangling establishing the south s complete dominance over the Yangtze River 43 Meanwhile Liu Bei and his principal adviser Zhuge Liang captured the Xiang River basin commanderies establishing control over the southern territories of Jing province 44 Sun Quan was forced to cede the territory around Jiangling to Liu Bei because he could not establish a proper authority over it after Zhou Yu s death in 210 44 In 211 Cao Cao defeated a warlord coalition in the Wei valley ending in the Battle of Huayin capturing the territory around Chang an 44 In 211 Liu Bei accepted an invitation from Liu Zhang to come to Yi Province for aiding the latter against a threat from the north namely Zhang Lu of Hanzhong 45 Liu Bei met people within Liu Zhang s court who wished that he would replace Liu Zhang as the ruler of Yi Province 45 A year after his arrival Liu Bei came into conflict with Liu Zhang and turned against him 45 In summer of 214 Liu Bei received the surrender of Liu Zhang capturing Yi Province and established his regime at Chengdu 45 In 215 Cao Cao captured Hanzhong after attacking and receiving the surrender of Zhang Lu 46 He had launched the attack from Chang an through the Qinling Mountain passes to Hanzhong 46 The conquest threatened Liu Bei s territory located directly to the south 46 Cao Cao progressively increased his titles and power under the puppet Emperor Xian He became the Chancellor in 208 the Duke of Wei in 214 and the King of Wei in 217 47 He also compelled Sun Quan to accept suzerainty to Wei but it had no real effect in practice 47 After Liu Bei had captured Yi Province from Liu Zhang in 214 Sun Quan who had been engaged with Cao Cao in the southeast at the region between the Huai and Yangtze rivers during the intervening years turned his attention to the middle Yangtze 44 Cao Cao and Sun Quan had gained no success in breaking each other s positions 44 Liu Fu an administrator under Cao Cao had established agricultural garrisons at Hefei and Shouchun to defend Cao s territory near the Huai river 44 Sun Quan resented the fact that Liu Bei a weaker ally had gained so much territory west of him and demanded a larger share of the Xiang River basin 44 In 215 Lu Meng Sun Quan s officer was sent to capture Jing province s southern commanderies but Guan Yu Liu Bei s general launched a counterattack 44 Later that year Liu Bei and Sun Quan reached a settlement that the Xiang River would serve as the border between their territories 44 In the south Sun Quan had sent He Qin Lu Xun and others to expand and conquer territory in what are now southern Zhejiang and Fujian provinces 44 In 219 Liu Bei seized Hanzhong by defeating and killing General Xiahou Yuan who served Cao Cao 47 Cao Cao sent reinforcements in an unsuccessful attempt to reclaim the territory 47 Liu Bei had now secured his territory against the north and declared himself the King of Hanzhong 47 In the east Sun Quan attempted to capture Hefei from Cao Cao but he did not succeed 47 While Lu Su had been chief commander for Sun Quan in Jing Province their policy was to maintain the alliance with Liu Bei while Cao Cao was still a threat 48 This changed when Sun Quan appointed Lu Meng when Lu Su died in 217 48 In 219 Guan Yu sailed from Jiangling up the Han River towards the city of Fan near Xianyang but was unable to capture it 49 In the autumn of 219 Lu Meng launched a surprise attack by sailing up the Yangtze towards Jiangling resulting in its capture 48 Guan Yu was unable to hold his position as most of his army surrendered 48 He was captured and executed on Sun Quan s order Cao Cao regained the Han valley while Sun Quan captured all the territory east of the Yangtze Gorges 48 Emergence of the Three Kingdoms Edit Bronze turtle holding a cup Eastern Wu At the beginning of 220 Cao Cao died and was succeeded by his son Cao Pi 48 On 11 December Emperor Xian abdicated and Cao Pi ascended the imperial throne by proclaiming the heavenly mandate as the Emperor of Wei 48 On 15 May 221 Liu Bei responded by proclaiming himself as the Emperor of Han 48 His state would become generally known as Shu Han 48 Sun Quan continued to recognize his de jure suzerainty to Wei and was enfeoffed as the King of Wu 48 At the end of 221 Shu invaded Wu in response for Guan Yu s killing and the loss of Jing Province by Wu 48 In the spring of 222 Liu Bei arrived at the scene to personally take command of the invasion 48 Sun Quan dispatched Lu Xun to command over the defence of Wu against the invasion by Shu 48 Against the advice of his subordinates Lu Xun waited until Liu Bei was committed along the Yangtze below the Yangtze Gorges 48 Finally in the sixth month of 222 Lu Xun launched a series of fire attacks against the flank of Liu Bei s extended position which caused disorder in the Shu army and Liu Bei s retreat to Baidi near present day Fengjie 50 Afterwards in 222 Sun Quan renounced his suzerainty to Wei and declared the independence of Wu 51 In 223 Liu Bei perished at Baidi 52 Zhuge Liang now acted as a regent for Liu Shan aged 17 and held control of the Shu government 53 Shu and Wu resumed their diplomatic relations by re establishing peace and alliance in the winter of 223 54 On 23 June 229 Sun Quan proclaimed himself as the Emperor of Wu 55 Shu controlled the upper Han valley and the territory west of the Yangtze Gorges 56 The Qinling Mountains divided Shu and Wei 56 Wei held control over the Wei and Huai valley where agricultural garrisons were established at Shouchun and Hefei to defend Huai 56 Military sorties by Wu against Hefei and Shouchun would consistently end in failure thereby confirming Wei s hold over Huai 56 Wu controlled all of the Yangtze valley 56 The territory between the Huai and Yangtze was a desolate area where a largely static frontier between Wei and Wu had formed at the lower Han valley 56 Map of the Three Kingdoms The Three States Edit Shu Edit Main article Shu Han See also Zhuge Liang s Southern Campaign and Zhuge Liang s Northern Expeditions Map showing Battle of Yiling between Shu Han and Wu kingdoms In 223 Liu Shan rose to the throne of Shu following his father s defeat and death From 224 to 225 during his southward campaigns Zhuge Liang conquered the southern territories up to Lake Dian in Yunnan 53 In 227 Zhuge Liang transferred his main Shu armies to Hanzhong and opened up the battle for the northwest with Wei The next year he ordered Zhao Yun to attack from Ji Gorge as a diversion while Zhuge himself led the main force to Mount Qi The vanguard Ma Su suffered a tactical defeat at Jieting and the Shu army was forced to withdraw In the next six years Zhuge Liang attempted several more offensives but supply problems limited the capacity for success In 234 he led his last great northern offensive reaching the Battle of Wuzhang Plains south of the Wei River Due to the death of Zhuge Liang in 234 the Shu army was forced once again to withdraw but were pursued by Wei The Shu forces began to withdraw Sima Yi deduced Zhuge Liang s demise and ordered an attack Shu struck back almost immediately causing Sima Yi to second guess and allow Shu to withdraw successfully Wu Edit Main article Eastern Wu Zhuge Liang s Southern Campaign Sun Quan turned to the aborigines of the southeast whom the Chinese collectively called the Shanyue A collection of successes against the rebellious tribesmen culminated in the victory of 224 In that year Zhuge Ke ended a three year siege of Danyang with the surrender of 100 000 Shanyue Of these 40 000 were drafted as auxiliaries into the Wu army Meanwhile Shu was also experiencing troubles with the indigenous tribes of their south The southwestern Nanman peoples rose in revolt against Shu authority captured and looted cities in Yi Province Zhuge Liang recognizing the importance of stability in the south ordered the advance of the Shu armies in three columns against the Nanman He fought a number of engagements against the chieftain Meng Huo at the end of which Meng Huo submitted A tribesman was allowed to reside at the Shu capital Chengdu as an official and the Nanman formed their own battalions within the Shu army Zhuge Liang s first and second northern expeditions against Cao Wei Zhuge Liang s third northern expedition against Cao Wei Zhuge Liang s fourth and fifth northern expeditions against Cao Wei In the times of Zhuge Liang s northern offensives the state of Wu had always been on the defensive against invasions from the north The area around Hefei was the scene of many bitter battles and under constant pressure from Wei after the Battle of Red Cliffs Warfare had grown so intense that many of the residents chose to migrate and resettle south of the Yangtze River After Zhuge Liang s death attacks on the southern Huai River region intensified but nonetheless Wei could not break through the line of the river defenses erected by Wu which included the Ruxu fortress Sun Quan s long reign is regarded as a time of plenty for his southern state Migrations from the north and the settlement of the Shanyue increased manpower for agriculture especially along the lower reaches of the Yangtze and in Kuaiji Commandery along the southern shore of Hangzhou Bay River transport blossomed with the construction of the Zhedong and Jiangnan canals Trade with Shu flourished with a huge influx of Shu cotton and the development of celadon and metal industries Sea journeys were made to Liaodong and the island of Taiwan In the south Wu merchants reached Linyi Southern Vietnam and Funan Kingdom As the economy prospered so too did the arts and culture In the Yangtze delta the first Buddhist influences reached the south from Luoyang The Eastern Wu era was a formative period in Vietnamese history A Jiaozhou modern Vietnam and Guangzhou prefect Shi Xie ruled Vietnam as an autonomous warlord for forty years and was posthumously deified by later Vietnamese emperors 57 Shi Xie pledged loyalty to Eastern Wu Originally satisfied with Eastern Wu s rule the Vietnamese opposed Shi Hui s rebellion against Eastern Wu and attacked him for it However when the Wu general Lu Dai betrayed Shi Hui and executed the entire Shi family the Vietnamese became greatly upset In 248 the people of Jiaozhi and Jiuzhen commanderies rebelled Eastern Wu sent Lu Yin to deal with the rebels He managed to pacify the rebels with a combination of threats and persuasion However the rebels regrouped under the leadership of Lady Triệu in Jiuzhen and renewed the rebellion with a march on Jiaozhi After several months of warfare she was defeated and committed suicide 58 Wei Edit Main article Cao Wei In 226 Cao Pi died aged 40 and was succeeded by his eldest son Cao Rui aged 22 59 Minister Chen Qun General Cao Zhen General Cao Xiu and General Sima Yi g were appointed as regents even though Cao Rui was able to manage the government in practice 59 Eventually the former three died leaving only Sima Yi as the senior minister and military commander 59 In 226 Sima Yi successfully defended Xiangyang against an offensive from Wu this battle was the first time he had command in the field 60 In 227 Sima Yi was appointed to a post at Chang an where he managed the military affairs along the Han River 60 In 238 Sima Yi was dispatched to command a military campaign against Gongsun Yuan of the self proclaimed Yan Kingdom in Liaodong resulting in Sima Yi s capture of his capital Xiangping and massacre of his government 60 Between 244 and 245 General Guanqiu Jian was dispatched to invade Goguryeo and severely devastated that state 60 The northeastern frontier of Wei was now secured from any possible threats 60 The invasions a retaliation against a Goguryeo raid in 242 destroyed the Goguryeo capital of Hwando sent its king fleeing and broke the tributary relationships between Goguryeo and the other tribes of Korea that formed much of Goguryeo s economy Although the king evaded capture and eventually settled in a new capital Goguryeo was reduced to such insignificance that for half a century there was no mention of the state in Chinese historical texts 61 Cao Zhi as depicted in Goddess of Luo River detail by Gu Kaizhi Jin dynasty China In 238 Cao Rui perished at age 35 60 He was succeeded by his adopted son Cao Fang aged 7 who was a close member of the imperial family 60 Cao Rui had appointed Cao Shuang and Sima Yi to be Cao Fang s regents even though he had contemplated to establish a regency council dominated by imperial family members 60 Cao Shuang held the principal control over the court 60 Meanwhile Sima Yi was received the honorific title of Grand Tutor but had virtually no influence at the court 60 Decline and End Edit Three Kingdoms in 262 on the eve of the conquest of Shu Wei and Wu Fall of Shu Edit Main article Conquest of Shu by Wei After Zhuge Liang s death his position as chancellor fell to Jiang Wan Fei Yi and Dong Yun in that order But after 258 Shu politics became increasingly controlled by the eunuch faction led by Huang Hao and corruption rose Despite the energetic efforts of Jiang Wei Zhuge Liang s protege Shu was unable to secure any decisive achievement In 263 Wei launched a three pronged attack and the Shu army was forced into general retreat from Hanzhong Jiang Wei hurriedly held a position at Jiange but he was outflanked by the Wei commander Deng Ai who force marched his army from Yinping through territory formerly considered impassable By the winter of the year the capital Chengdu fell due to the strategic invasion of Wei by Deng Ai who invaded Chengdu personally The emperor Liu Shan thus surrendered The state of Shu had come to an end after 43 years Liu Shan was reinstated to the Wei capital of Luoyang and was given the new title of the Duke of Anle Directly translated it meant the Duke of Safety and Happiness and was a trivial position with no actual power Fall of Wei Edit From the late 230s tensions began to become visible between the imperial Cao clan and the Sima clan Following the death of Cao Zhen factionalism was evident between Cao Shuang and the Grand Tutor Sima Yi In deliberations Cao Shuang placed his own supporters in important posts and excluded Sima Yi whom he regarded as a dangerous threat The power of the Sima clan one of the great landowning families of the Han dynasty was bolstered by Sima Yi s military victories Additionally Sima Yi was an extremely capable strategist and politician In 238 he crushed the rebellion of Gongsun Yuan s self proclaimed Yan Kingdom and brought the Liaodong region directly under central control Ultimately he outmanoeuvred Cao Shuang in power play Taking advantage of an excursion by the imperial clansmen to the Gaoping Tombs Sima Yi undertook a putsch in Luoyang forcing Cao Shuang s faction from authority Many protested against the overwhelming power of the Sima family notable among these were the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove One of the sages Xi Kang was executed as part of the purges after Cao Shuang s downfall Cao Huan succeeded to the throne in 260 after Cao Mao was killed in a failed coup against Sima Zhao Soon after Sima Zhao died and his title as Duke of Jin was inherited by his son Sima Yan Sima Yan immediately began plotting to become emperor but faced stiff opposition Following advice from his advisors Cao Huan decided the best course of action would be to abdicate unlike his predecessor Cao Mao Sima Yan seized the throne in 266 after forcing Cao Huan s abdication effectively overthrowing the Wei dynasty and establishing the successor Jin dynasty This situation was similar to the deposal of Emperor Xian of Han by Cao Pi 40 years earlier Fall of Wu Edit Main article Conquest of Wu by Jin Following Sun Quan s death and the ascension of the young Sun Liang to the throne in 252 the state of Wu went into steady decline Successful Wei suppression of rebellions in the southern Huai River region by Sima Zhao and Sima Shi reduced any opportunity of Wu influence The fall of Shu signalled a change in Wei politics After Liu Shan surrendered to Wei Sima Yan grandson of Sima Yi overthrew the Wei emperor and proclaimed his own dynasty of Jin in 266 ending 46 years of Cao dominion in the north After Jin s rise emperor Sun Xiu of Wu died and his ministers gave the throne to Sun Hao Sun Hao was a promising young man but upon ascension he became a tyrant killing or exiling all who dared oppose him in the court In 269 Yang Hu a Jin commander in the south started preparing for the invasion of Wu by ordering the construction of a fleet and the training of marines in Sichuan under Wang Jun Four years later Lu Kang the last great general of Wu died leaving no competent successor The planned Jin offensive finally came at the end of 279 Sima Yan launched five simultaneous offensives along the Yangtze River from Jianye present day Nanjing to Jiangling while the Sichuan fleet sailed downriver to Jing Province Under the strain of such an enormous attack the Wu forces collapsed and Jianye fell in the third month of 280 Sun Hao surrendered and was given a fiefdom on which to live out his days This marked the end of the Three Kingdoms era and the beginning of a break in the forthcoming 300 years of disunity Impact EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Three Kingdoms news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Population Edit Pottery dwelling around a large courtyard a siheyuan Unearthed in 1967 in a tomb of Hubei built during the kingdom of Eastern Wu Three Kingdoms period National Museum of China Beijing After the Yellow Turban Rebellion serious famine followed in the Central Plains of China After his coming to power Dong Zhuo gave full swing to his army to loot and plunder the population and abduct women into forced marriages servants or consorts When the Guandong Coalition was starting the campaign against Dong Zhuo he embarked upon a scorched earth campaign proclaiming that all the population of Luoyang be forced to move to Chang an all the palaces temples official residences and homes be burnt no one should stay within that area of 200 li Considering the hardships of that time this amounted to a death sentence for many and cries of discontent rose as the population of Luoyang decreased sharply When Cao Cao attacked Xu Province it was said that hundreds of thousands of men and women were buried alive even dogs and chickens did not survive The Si River was blocked From then on these five towns never recovered citation needed When Li Jue and his army were advancing towards the Guanzhong area there remained hundreds of thousands of people but Li Jue allowed his army to plunder the cities and the people thus making the people have nothing but eat each other to death citation needed The following table shows the severe decrease of population during that period From the late Eastern Han to the Western Jin dynasty despite the length of about 125 years the peak population only equaled 35 3 of the peak population during the Eastern Han dynasty From the Western Jin dynasty to the Sui dynasty the population never recovered High militarization of the population was common For example the population of Shu was 900 000 but the military numbered over 100 000 The Records of the Three Kingdoms contains population figures for the Three Kingdoms As with many Chinese historical population figures these numbers are likely to be less than the actual populations since census and tax records went hand in hand and tax evaders were often not on records During the Three Kingdoms period 220 280 AD a number of statuses intermediate between freedom and slavery developed but none of them are thought to have exceeded 1 percent of the population 62 Three Kingdoms Period Populations 63 Year Households Population NotesEastern Han dynasty 156 10 679 600 56 486 856Shu Han 221 200 000 900 000Shu Han 263 280 000 1 082 000 At Shu s demise the population contained 102 000 armed soldiers and 40 000 various officials Eastern Wu 238 520 000 2 567 000Eastern Wu 280 530 000 2 535 000 At Wu s demise the population had 32 000 officials 230 000 soldiers and 5 000 imperial concubines Cao Wei 260 663 423 4 432 881Western Jin dynasty 280 2 495 804 16 163 863 After reuniting China the Jin dynasty s population was greatest around this time While it is clear that warfare undoubtedly took many lives during this period the census figures do not support the idea that tens of millions were wiped out solely from warfare Other factors such as mass famines and infectious diseases due to the collapse of sustaining governance and migrations out of China must be taken into account 64 65 Economy Edit In the late Eastern Han dynasty due to natural disasters and social unrest the economy was badly depressed leading to the massive waste of farmland Some local landlords and aristocracy established their own strongholds to defend themselves and developed agriculture which gradually evolved into a self sufficient manorial system The system of strongholds and manors also had effects on the economical mode of following dynasties In addition because of the collapse of the imperial court those worn copper coins were not melted and reminted and many privately minted coins appeared In the Three Kingdoms period newly minted coins never made their way into currency Due to the collapse of the coinage Cao Wei officially declared silk cloth and grains as the main currencies in 221 66 In economic terms the division of the Three Kingdoms reflected a reality that long endured Even during the Northern Song dynasty 700 years after the Three Kingdoms period it was possible to think of China as being composed of three great regional markets The status of the northwest was slightly ambivalent as it had links with the northern region and Sichuan These geographical divisions are underscored by the fact that the main communication routes between the three main regions were all human made the Grand Canal linking north and south the hauling way through the Three Gorges of the Yangtze River linking southern China with Sichuan and the gallery roads joining Sichuan with the northwest The break into three separate entities was quite natural and even anticipated by such political foresight as that of Zhuge Liang see Longzhong Plan Literature EditCao Cao the founder of the Wei kingdom and his four sons were influential poets especially Cao Zhi 192 232 and Cao Pi 187 226 67 Cao Pi wrote the earliest work of literary criticism the Essay on Literature Cao Zhi together with Xu Gan sponsored a resurgence of the Jian an style of lyric poetry Cao Zhi is considered by most modern critics to be the most important Chinese writer between Qu Yuan and Tao Yuanming 68 Historiography EditSources Edit A fragment of the biography of Bu Zhi from the Records of the Three Kingdoms part of the Dunhuang manuscriptsThe standard history of the period is the Records of the Three Kingdoms compiled by the Western Jin historian Chen Shou in the third century AD The work synthesizes the histories of the rival states of Cao Wei Shu Han and Eastern Wu in the Three Kingdoms period into a single compiled text An expanded version of the Records of the Three Kingdoms was published by the Liu Song historian Pei Songzhi in 429 whose Annotations to Records of the Three Kingdoms supplemented the original with sizable excerpts of texts unused by Chen Shou and provided commentaries The resulting work nearly doubled the size of the original Records 69 and the composite work of Chen and Pei are canonized as official history 正史 70 In addition to the Records of the Three Kingdoms the years 189 to 220 are also covered by the previous standard history Book of the Later Han by Fan Ye a contemporary of Pei Songzhi which mainly draws from documents of the Han court 71 For the later years biographies of the Jin dynasty progenitors Sima Yi Sima Shi and Sima Zhao are only found in the following standard history Book of Jin by the Tang dynasty historian Fang Xuanling The legitimacy issue Edit Traditional Chinese political thought is concerned with the concept of the Mandate of Heaven from which a ruler derives legitimacy to rule all under heaven In the Three Kingdoms period Cao Wei Shu Han and Eastern Wu all laid claim to the Mandate by virtue of their founders declaring themselves as emperors Later historians would disagree on which of the Three Kingdoms primarily between Wei and Shu should be considered the sole legitimate successor to the Han dynasty Chen Shou the compiler of the Records of the Three Kingdoms hailed from Shu Han and became an official of the Western Jin dynasty when he was working on the Records As Western Jin succeeded Cao Wei Chen was careful in his compilation to imply Cao Wei was the legitimate state Despite the description of events being mostly balanced and fair 72 Chen Shou legitimized Wei by placing the Wei annals first using the era names from Wei s calendar and reserving regal nomenclature for the leaders of Wei Specifically emperors of Cao Wei are referred to by their imperial posthumous names eg Cao Pi is referred to as the Civil Emperor 文帝 while the Shu and Wu emperors are mere rulers eg Liu Bei is referred to as the First Ruler 先主 and Sun Quan as Ruler of Wu 吳主 70 Chen Shou as a subject of Jin could not write in a way that implies Jin as illegitimate by denying Cao Wei s claim to the mandate despite what sympathies he might have had toward his home state of Shu 73 Chen Shou s treatment of the legitimacy issue was generally accepted through to the Northern Song dynasty Despite maintaining that none of the three states truly held the Mandate of Heaven since they all failed to unify China Song historian Sima Guang used Wei s era names and thus affirmed the legitimacy of Wei s succession to Han in his universal history Zizhi Tongjian 74 Sima Guang explained that his choice was merely out of convenience and he was not honouring one and treating another with contempt nor making distinction between orthodox and intercalary positions 74 Nonetheless the influential Neo Confucian moralist Zhu Xi criticized Sima Guang s choice taking the position that Shu Han was the true successor to the Han dynasty since Liu Bei was related to the imperial Liu clan by blood and thus used Shu s calendar in his rewrite of Sima Guang s work the Zizhi Tongjian Gangmu 75 This position first argued by Xi Zuochi in the fourth century 76 found support in Zhu Xi s time since the Song dynasty found itself in a similar situation as Shu Han as it was forced out of north China by the Jurchens in 1127 and became known as the Southern Song 77 The revisionist private histories of the time emphasized humane governence 仁政 as a mark of legitimate dynastic succession and saw Liu Bei as an idealized Confucian monarch 78 The pro Shu bias then found its way into popular forms of entertainment such as pinghua tales and zaju performances and was eventually codified in the 14th century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms 79 Legacy in popular culture EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Three Kingdoms news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information List of media adaptations of Romance of the Three Kingdoms Numerous people and affairs from the period later became Chinese legends The most complete and influential example is the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong during the Ming dynasty Possibly due to the popularity of Romance of the Three Kingdoms the Three Kingdoms era is one of the most well known non modern Chinese eras in terms of iconic characters deeds and exploits This is reflected in the way that fictional accounts of the Three Kingdoms mostly based on the novel play a significant role in East Asian popular culture Books television dramas films cartoons anime games and music on the topic are still regularly produced in mainland China Hong Kong Taiwan South Korea Vietnam Japan and Southeast Asia 80 Japanese video game developer Koei later merged with Tecmo to form Koei Tecmo introduced multiple generations of young gamers in the West to the Three Kingdoms era through its retelling of the history across its long and successful franchises of Romance of the Three Kingdoms strategy games and Dynasty Warriors action games The games evoked a fascination with the period among many Western players similar to the interest stoked among East Asians by local pop culture and media albeit to a less prevalent and intense extent in the West 81 82 See also EditGame of the Three Kingdoms Jian an poetry Lists of people of the Three Kingdoms Six Dynasties poetryNotes Edit Referring to the Han dynasty government the word 蒼 here glossed as grey is specifically the colour of an old person s hair alluding to the decrepit state of the Han Referring to the Yellow Turban Rebellion Jiazi is the first step of the sexagenary cycle signifying a new beginning Book of Han Record of Emperor Xiaoling and the Zizhi Tongjian Guanghe Year 6 record that Zhang Jiao declared himself Yellow Emperor and took their movement s name from a headscarf worn by followers yellow signifying the Yellow Emperor and imperial authority Roughly covering the Sichuan Basin The area between present day Baoding and Taiyuan Earlier in 217 Sima Yi had become a member of the heir apparent Cao Pi s entourage He steadily rose in position during Cao Pi s reign Crespigny 1991 31 References Edit Theobald 2000 Kang Youwei 21 October 2013 歐洲十一國遊記二種 in Chinese Taiwan 群出版 p 98 History of Three Kingdoms Period China Education Center www chinaeducenter com Dreyer Edward L 2009 Military Aspects of the War of the Eight Princes 300 307 In Military Culture in Imperial China edited by Nicola Di Cosmo Cambridge Harvard University Press 112 142 ISBN 978 0674031098 Hans Bielenstein Chinese historical demography A D 2 1982 Ostasiatiska museet p 17 Breverton Terry 2013 Breverton s Encyclopedia of Inventions Unabridged ed Quercus ISBN 978 1623652340 Szczepanski Kallie The Invention of the Crossbow About com Retrieved 31 March 2015 Hong Sen Yan 2007 Reconstruction Designs of Lost Ancient Chinese Machinery Online Ausg ed Dordrecht Springer Science amp Business Media p 129 ISBN 978 1402064609 Xiong Victor Cunrui 2009 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China Lanham Md Scarecrow Press p 351 ISBN 978 0810860537 佚名 January 2013 Chinese History ISBN 9781921678882 Romance of the Three Kingdoms China s Greatest Epic 三國志演義 Yellow Bridge Retrieved 1 April 2015 Tanner Harold Miles 13 March 2009 China A History Indianapolis Indiana Hackett Publishing pp 141 142 ISBN 978 0872209152 Guo Jian 郭建 1999 千秋興亡 Rise and Fall over Thousands of Autumns Changchun 長春出版社 Changchun Press Jiang Lang 姜狼 2011 184 280 三國原來這樣 184 280 It Turns out the Three Kingdoms Were like This Beijing 現代出版社 Modern Press Han Guopan 韓國磐 1983 魏晉南北朝史綱 Historical Highlights of the Six Dynasties Beijing 人民出版社 People s Press Zhang Binsheng 張儐生 1982 魏晉南北朝政治史 Administrative History of the Six Dynasties Taipei 中國文化大學 Chinese Culture University Press Gao Min 高敏 ed 1998 中國經濟通史 魏晉南北朝經濟卷 The Complete Economic History of China Economy of the Six Dynasties Hong Kong 經濟日報出版社 Economics Daily Press Luo Kun 羅琨 et al 1998 中國軍事通史 三國軍事史 The Complete Military History of China Three Kingdoms Military History Beijing 軍事科學出版社 Military Science Press Zhu Dawei 朱大渭 et al 1998 魏晉南北朝社會生活史 The Social History of the Six Dynasties Beijing 中國社會科學出版社 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Zhang Wenqiang 張文強 1994 中國魏晉南北朝軍事史 China s Six Dynasties Military History Beijing 人民出版社 People s Press Zhang Chengzong 張承宗 Wei Xiangdong 魏向東 2001 中國風俗通史 魏晉南北朝卷 The Complete History of Chinese Customs Six Dynasties Shanghai 上海藝文出版社 Shanghai People s Press He Dezhang 何德章 1994 中國魏晉南北朝政治史 百卷本國全史第7 China s Six Dynasties Administrative History This Nation s Total History in 100 Volumes no 7 Beijing 人民出版社 People s Press Wang Lihua 王利華 et al 2009 中國農業通史 魏晉南北朝卷 The Complete History of Chinese Agriculture Six Dynasties Beijing 中國農業出版社 Chinese Agricultural Press a b c Roberts Moss 1991 Three Kingdoms A Historical Novel California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22503 1 Wilkinson Endymion 2000 Chinese history A manual Revised and enlarged ed Cambridge Harvard University Asia Center for the Harvard Yenching Institute p 11 ISBN 978 0 674 00249 4 Theobald Ulrich 28 June 2011 The Yellow Turban Uprising Chinaknowledge Retrieved 7 March 2015 a b c de Crespigny 1991 1 a b de Crespigny 1991 1 2 a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991 2 a b c de Crespigny 1991 2 3 守尸吏暝以為大炷 置卓臍中以為灯 光明達旦 如是積日 According to the Annal of Heroes the light from his corpse could be compared to that of the sun a b de Crespigny 1991 3 4 a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991 3 a b c d e de Crespigny 1991 6 de Crespigny 2007 p 988 a b de Crespigny 1991 7 8 a b c d e f g h de Crespigny 1991 7 a b c d e f g h de Crespigny 1991 4 de Crespigny 1991 4 amp 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q de Crespigny 1991 8 a b c d de Crespigny 1991 21 de Crespigny 1991 8 amp 21 a b de Crespigny 1991 9 a b c d e f g h i j de Crespigny 1991 10 a b c d de Crespigny 1991 10 11 amp 21 22 a b c de Crespigny 1991 10 11 a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n de Crespigny 1991 12 de Crespigny 1991 11 12 de Crespigny 1991 12 13 de Crespigny 1991 13 amp 20 de Crespigny 1991 12 13 amp 22 a b de Crespigny 1991 22 de Crespigny 1991 13 amp 16 de Crespigny 1991 16 a b c d e f de Crespigny 1991 13 Taylor Keith Weller 1 April 1991 The Birth of Vietnam University of California Press via Google Books Taylor 1983 p 70 a b c de Crespigny 1991 31 a b c d e f g h i j de Crespigny 1991 32 Byington Mark E Control or Conquer Koguryǒ s Relations with States and Peoples in Manchuria Journal of Northeast Asian History volume 4 number 1 June 2007 93 Williams R Owen November 2006 Encyclopedia of Antislavery and Abolition Two Volumes Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 01524 3 From Zou Jiwan Chinese 鄒紀萬 Zhongguo Tongshi Weijin Nanbeichao Shi 中國通史 魏晉南北朝史 1992 China has been plagued and shaped by epidemics it has also overcome them South China Morning Post 21 December 2021 Mazanec Thomas J 1 September 2020 Review The Halberd at Red Cliff Jian an and the Three Kingdoms by Xiaofei Tian Studies in Late Antiquity 4 3 353 359 doi 10 1525 sla 2020 4 3 353 ISSN 2470 6469 S2CID 225333779 de Crespigny Rafe November 2003 The Three Kingdoms and Western Jin A history of China in the Third Century CE Australian National University Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2015 Burton Watson 1971 Chinese Lyricism Shih Poetry from the Second to the Twelfth Century Columbia University Press p 38 ISBN 0 231 03464 4 Knechtges 2010 p 174 Cutter amp Crowell 1999 p 149 a b McLaren 2006 p 294 de Crespigny 2020 p xi McLaren 2012 p 46 note 14 Cutter amp Crowell 1999 p 71 a b de Crespigny 2018 p 353 Mansvelt Beck 1986 pp 374 375 McLaren 2012 p 53 note 41 McLaren 2006 pp 295 296 McLaren 2006 p 302 McLaren 2012 p 46 Craig J Reynolds Seditious Histories Contesting Thai and Southeast Asian Pasts Washington University of Washington Press 2006 How Creative Assembly and Koei Tecmo bring the Romance of the Three Kingdoms to life 19 February 2020 Rian E Johnson May 2020 Enemy Officer Defeated The Dynasty Warriors Series within the Spheres of Three Kingdoms and Videogames MA doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 25414 09281 via ResearchGate Bibliography EditBielenstein Hans 1947 The census of China during the period 2 742 A D Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 19 125 163 Cutter Robert Joe Crowell William Gordon 1999 Empresses and consorts selections from Chen Shou s Records of the Three States with Pei Songzhi s commentary Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 585 32007 1 OCLC 45843016 de Crespigny Rafe 1991 The Three Kingdoms and Western Jin A History of China in the Third Century AD I PDF East Asian History 1 1 de Crespigny Rafe 2007 A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms Brill de Crespigny Rafe 2018 1990 Generals of the South the foundation and early history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu Internet ed Faculty of Asian Studies The Australian National University de Crespigny Rafe 2020 1996 To Establish Peace being the Chronicle of the Later Han dynasty for the years 189 to 200 AD as recorded in Chapters 59 to 63 of the Zizhi tongjian of Sima Guang Internet ed Australia Centre on China in the World The Australian National University hdl 1885 212581 ISBN 978 0 7315 2537 9 Ge Jianxiong 中国人口史 History of the Population of China vol 1 Shanghai Fudan University Press 2002 ISBN 7 309 03520 8 Knechtges David R 2010 From the Eastern Han Through the Western Jin AD 25 317 In Kang yi Sun Chang Stephen Owen eds The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature New York Cambridge University Press pp 116 198 ISBN 9780521855587 Mansvelt Beck B J 1986 Twitchett Denis Loewe Michael eds The fall of Han The Cambridge History of China Volume 1 The Ch in and Han Empires 221 BC AD 220 The Cambridge History of China Cambridge Cambridge University Press vol 1 pp 317 376 doi 10 1017 chol9780521243278 007 ISBN 978 0 521 24327 8 retrieved 17 November 2020 McLaren Anne E 2006 History Repackaged in the Age of Print The Sanguozhi and Sanguo yanyi Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 69 2 293 313 doi 10 1017 S0041977X06000139 ISSN 0041 977X JSTOR 20182040 S2CID 154489082 McLaren Anne E 2012 Writing History Writing Fiction The Remaking of Cao Cao in Song Historiography Monumenta Serica 60 1 45 69 doi 10 1179 mon 2012 60 1 003 ISSN 0254 9948 S2CID 193917398 San Tan Koon 2014 Dynastic China An Elemental History The Other Press ISBN 978 9839541885 Taylor Jay 1983 The Birth of the Vietnamese University of California Press Theobald Ulrich 2000 Chinese History Three Kingdoms 三國 220 280 Chinaknowledge retrieved 7 July 2015Further reading EditSima Guang 1952 The Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms 220 265 Chapters 69 78 from the Tz U Chih T ung Chien translated by Achilles Fang Glen William Baxter and Bernard S Solomon Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Hill John E 2004 The Peoples of the West from the Weilue 魏略 by Yu Huan 魚豢 A Third Century Chinese Account Composed between 239 and 265 University of Washington Draft annotated English translation External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Three Kingdoms Online Three Kingdoms publications of Dr Rafe de Crespigny Australian National UniversityPreceded byHan dynasty Dynasties in Chinese history220 280 Succeeded byJin dynasty Portals China History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Three Kingdoms amp oldid 1159908519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.