Jin Dynasty (265-420)
zh-cn:晋朝zh-tw:晉朝The Jin Dynasty (晉 jin4, 265-420) followed the Three Kingdoms and preceded the Southern and Northern Dynasties in China. The dynasty was founded by the Sima family, 司馬 pinyin si1 ma3.
The first of the two periods, the Western Jin Dynasty (ch. 西晉, 265-316), was founded by Emperor Wu. Although providing a brief period of unity after conquering the Kingdom of Wu in AD 280, the Jin could not contain the invasion and uprising of nomadic peoples after the devastating War of the Eight Princes. The capital was Luoyang until 311 when Emperor Huai was captured by the forces of Han Zhao. Successive reign of Emperor Min lasted four years in Chang'an until its conquest by Former Zhao in 316.
Meanwhile remnants of the Jin court fled from the north to the south and reestablished the Jin court at Jiankang, whch was located south-eastward of Luoyang and Chang'an and near modern-day Nanjing, under Prince of Longya. Prominent local families of Zhu, Gan, Lu, Gu and Zhou supported the proclamation of Prince of Longya as Emperor Yuan of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (ch. 东晉 317-420) when the news of the fall of Chang'an reached the south.
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Militaristic authorities and crises plagued the Eastern Jin court throughout its 104 years of existence. It survived the rebellions of Wang Dun and Su Jun. Huan Wen died in 373 before proclaiming himself emperor. Battle of Fei turned out to be a victory of Jin under a short-lived cooperation of Huan Chong, brother of Huan Wen and the Prime Minister (or Imperial Secretariat) Xie An. Huan Xuan, son of Huan Wen, usurped and changed the name of the dynasty to Chu. He was toppled by Liu Yu, who proclaimed himself Emperor Wu and forced the abdication of the last emperor, Emperor Gong, in 420.
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2 Major events 3 See also |
Figure
| Posthumous names | Family name and given names | Duration of reigns | Era names and their according range of years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese convention: "Jin" + posthumous name + "di" | |||
| Western Jin Dynasty 265-316 | |||
| Wu | Sima Yan | 265-290 | Taishi 265-274Xianning 275-280 |
| Hui | Sima Zhong | 290-307 | Yongxi May 17, 290-February 15,291Yongping February 16-April 23,291 |
| unknown | Sima Lun | 301 | Jianshi February 3-June 1,301 |
| Huai | Sima Chi | 307-311 | Yongjia 307-313 |
| Min | Sima Ye | 313-316 | Jianxing 313-317 |
| Eastern Jin Dynasty 317 AD - 420 AD | |||
| Yuan (元 yuan2) | Sima Rui (司馬睿 si1 ma3 rui4) | 317-322 | Jianwu (建武 jian4 wu3) 317-318Daxing (大興 da4 xing1) 318-321 |
| Ming (明 ming2) | Sima Shao (司馬紹 si1 ma3 shao4) | 322-325 | Yongchang (永昌 yong3 chang3) 322-323Taining (太寧 tai4 ning2) 323-325 |
| Cheng (成 cheng2) | Sima Yan (司馬衍 si1 ma3 yan3) | 325-342 | Taining (太寧 tai4 ning2) 325Xianhe (咸和 xian2 he2) 326-334 |
| Kang (康 kang1) | Sima Yue (司馬岳 si1 ma3 yue4) | 342-344 | Jianyuan (建元 jian4 yuan2) 343-344 |
| Mu (穆 mu4) | Sima Dan (司馬聃 si1 ma3 dan1) | 345-361 | Yonghe (永和 yong3 he2) 345-356Shengping (升平 sheng1 ping2) 357-361 |
| Ai (哀 ai1) | Sima Pi (司馬丕 si1 ma3 pi1) | 361-365 | Longhe (隆和 long2 he2) 362-363Xingning (興寧 xing1 ning2) 363-365 |
| Haixi Gong (海西公 hai3 xi1 gong1) | Sima Yi (司馬奕 si1 ma3 yi4) | 365-371 | Taihe (太和 tai4 he2) 365-371 |
| Jianwen (簡文 jian3 wen2) | Sima Yu (司馬昱 si1 ma3 yu4) | 371-372 | Xianan (咸安 xian2 an1) 371-372 |
| Xiaowu (孝武 xiao4 wu3) | Sima Yao (司馬曜 si1 ma3 yao4) | 372-396 | Ningkang (寧康 ning2 kang1) 373-375Taiyuan (太元 tai4 yuan2) 376-396 |
| An (安 an1) | Sima Dezong (司馬德宗 si1 ma3 de2 zong1) | 396-418 | Longan (隆安 long2 an1) 397-401Yuanxing (元興 yuan2 xing1) 402-404 |
| Gong (恭 gong1) | Sima Dewen (司馬德文 si1 ma3 de2 wen2) | 419-420 | Yuanxi (元熙 yuan2 xi1) 419-420 |
Major events
- War of the Eight Princes
- Wu Hu ravaging
- Battle of Fei
See also
- Chinese history
- Sixteen Kingdoms
- Chinese sovereign
- Northern Headquarters Troops
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Preceded by: Three Kingdoms | Timeline of Chinese history |
Succeeded by: Sixteen Kingdoms and Northern Wei of the Northern Dynasties |
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Succeeded by: Song Dynasty of the Southern Dynasties |


