Kingdom of Wu
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The Kingdom of Wu (Chinese: 吳, pinyin: wú) refers to a historical nation and several states in a region of China. The original capital of Wu was the city of Suzhou, some 60 kilometers west of present-day Shanghai.
The first Wu Kingdom was united by Taibo during the Spring and Autumn Period. Originally considered a part of the Eastern Barbarians, the people of the Wu Kingdom became sinicized during the Warring States Period. Ambassadoral visits to Japan by the later Northern Chinese dynasties Wei and Jin (Encounters of the Eastern Barbarians, Wei Chronicles) recorded that the Japanese people claimed to be descendents of Taibo of Wu, refugees after the fall of Wu. (History books do have records of Wu Taibo sending 4000 males and 4000 females to Japan.)
- 魏略:「倭人自謂太伯之後。」
- 晉書:「自謂太伯之後,又言上古使詣中國,皆自稱大夫。」 列傳第六十七 四夷
- 資治通鑑:「今日本又云呉太伯之後,蓋呉亡,其支庶入海為倭。」
WuJar.JPG
From AD 222 - 280, the Wu Kingdom was one of the Three Kingdoms competing for control of China after the fall of the Han Dynasty. During the decline of the Han dynasty, the State of Wu - a region in the south of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), surrounding Nanjing - was under the control of the warlord Sun Quan. Sun Quan succeeded his brother as the King of Wu and considered the area under his rule subject to the Han emperor. Unlike his competitors, he did not really have the ambition to be Emperor of China. However, after Cao Pi of the Kingdom of Wei and Liu Bei of the Kingdom of Shu each declared themselves to be the Emperor, Sun Quan decided to follow suit in 222, claiming to have founded the Wu Dynasty.
Under the rule of Wu, Southern China, regarded in early history as a barbaric "jungle" developed into one of the commercial, cultural, and political centers of China. Within five centuries, during the Five Dynasties and Ten States, the development of Southern China had surpassed that of the north. The achievements of Wu marked the beginning of the cultural and political division between Northern and Southern China that would repeatedly appear in Chinese history well into modernity. The term Southern China as used here does not include Guangdong and other provinces in the far south, which were not incorporated into China proper until the Tang Dynasty and remained for the most part economically and culturally backward until the late 19th century.
The island of Taiwan was also first recorded during the Three Kingdoms. Contacts with the native population and the dispatch of officials to Taiwan by the Wu Kingdom eventually paved the road for the immigration of Chinese settlers into Taiwan.
The Kingdom of Wu was finally conquered by the first Jin emperor, Sima Yan, in 280. With a lifespan of 58 years, it was the longest-lived of the three kingdoms.
Important figures:
- Sun Jian (孫堅)
- Sun Ce (孫策),
- Sun Quan (孫權)
- Huang Gai (黃蓋)
- Gan Ning (甘寧)
- Taishi Ci (太史慈)
- Zhou Yu (周瑜)
- Zhou Tai (周泰)
- Lu Su (魯肅)
- Lü Meng (呂蒙)
- Lu Yi (Xun) (陸遜)
- Zhang Zhao (張昭)
- Zhang Hong (張紘)
- Zhuge Jin (諸葛謹)
- Dong Xi (董袭)
- Xu Sheng (徐盛)
- Chen Wu (陈武)
List of sovereigns
Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號) | Personal names | Year(s) of Reigns | Era Names (Nian Hao 年號) and their range of years |
---|---|---|---|
Convention: use personal name | |||
Da Di (大帝 da4 di4) | Sun Quan (孫權 sun1 quan2) | 222-252 |
Huangwu (黃武 huang2 wu3) 222-229 |
Kuai Ji Wang (會稽王 kuai4 ji1 wang2) | Sun Liang (孫亮 sun1 liang4) | 252-258 |
Jianxing (建興 jian4 xing1) 252-253 |
Jing Di (景帝 jing3 di4) | Sun Xiu (孫休 sun1 xiu1) | 258-264 | Yongan (永安 yong3 an1) 258-264 |
Wu Cheng Hou (烏程侯 wu1 cheng2 hou2) | Sun Hao (孫皓 sun1 hao4) | 264-280 |
Yuanxing (元興 yuan2 xing1) 264-265 |