Wei (state)

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This article is about the State of Wei of the Warring States Period. See Kingdom of Wei for the state founded by Cao Cao during the Three Kingdoms Period. See Ran Min for his state of Wei during the Sixteen Kingdoms. See Wei (Spring and Autumn Period) and Liang (state) for the identically pronounced State of Wei (卫国/衞國) and State of Liang (梁国/梁國).
魏国/魏國
State of Wei
403 BCE–225 BCE
Capital Anyi (安邑), north west of modern day Xia County, Shanxi Province
Daliang (大梁), modern day Kaifeng City, Henan Province
Language(s) various Chinese languages
Government Marquessate (侯), Monarchy (王) after 344 BCE
History
 - Established 403 BCE
 - Disestablished 225 BCE


This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.
State of Wei
(small seal script, 220 BC)

The State of Wei (simplified Chinese: 魏国; traditional Chinese: 魏國; pinyin: Wèi) was a Zhou Dynasty vassal state during the Warring States Period (475–221 BCE) of Chinese history. Its territory lay between the states of Qin and Qi and included parts of modern day Henan, Hebei, Shanxi and Shandong. After its capital was moved from Anyi to Daliang (today Kaifeng) during the reign of King Hui of Wei, Wei was also called the state of Liang.

Contents

[edit] History

The state reached its apogee during the reigns of its first two rulers, Marquess Wen of Wei and Marquess Wu of Wei. King Hui of Wei, the third ruler, concentrated on economic developments including irrigation projects at the Yellow River. Nevertheless, its slow decline began with King Hui. King Hui felt that Qin in the west was a nonthreatening weak state and their land was just wasteland, and hence he focused on conquering land in the east that was rich in resources. However, Wei's advancement in the east was checked several times in a series of battles including the Battle of Maling in 341 BCE. On the other hand, Qin's reformation at the same period boosted Qin's economy and military might to unprecedented levels. Eventually Wei lost the western Hexi region (a pastoral and strategic area on the west bank of the Yellow River at the border of today's Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces) to Qin, and remained continuously under invasion from Qin until the end. This eventually forced Wei to move its capital from Anyi to Daliang.

The military prowess of Qin broke the coalition forces of the States of Wei and Han at the Battle of Yique in 293 BCE.

Wei surrendered to Qin in 225 BCE, after the Qin general Wang Fen flooded Daliang with water from the Yellow River.

Wei produced some able generals and politicians, including Li Kui, a reformer and Prime Minister of Wei, Yue Yang, ancestor of Yue Yi and conqueror of the State of Zhongshan, and Pang Juan, who conquered many places but lost to Lord Mengchang of Qi and Sun Bin at the Battle of Maling.

[edit] List of Wei rulers

  1. Marquess Wen of Wei, personal name Si (斯) or Du (都), (445–396 BCE)
  2. Marquess Wu of Wei, personal name Ji (擊), son of Marquess Wen, (396–370 BCE)
  3. King Hui of Wei, personal name Ying (罃), son of Marquess Wu, (370–319)
  4. King Xiang of Wei (魏襄王), personal name Si (嗣) or He (赫), son of King Hui, (319–296)
  5. King Zhao of Wei (魏昭王), personal name Chi (遫), son of King Xiang, (296–277 BCE)
  6. King Anxi of Wei (魏安釐王),personal name Yu (圉), son of King Zhao, (277–243 BCE)
  7. King Jingmin of Wei (魏景湣王), personal name Zeng (增) or Wu (午), son of King Anxi, (243–228 BCE)
  8. King Jia, (魏王假), personal name Jia (假), son of King Jomgmin, (228&ndash225 BCE)

According to Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian written in the 1st century BCE, the list of rulers is slightly different: King Hui died in 335 BCE and was succeeded by his son King Xiang in 334 BCE. King Xiang died in 319 BCE and was succeeded by his son King Ai (哀王), who died in 296 BCE and was succeeded by his son King Zhao. However, the majority of scholars and commentators believe that King Ai, whose personal name is not recorded, never existed. It seems that Sima Qian assigned the second part of the reign of King Hui (starting in 334 BCE, on which date the hitherto Marquess Hui probably proclaimed himself King) to his son King Xiang, and added King Ai to fill in the gap between 319 and 296 BCE. On the other hand, a minority of scholars believe King Ai did indeed exist[citation needed].

[edit] The King of Wei in legend

An unnamed King of Wei is featured in one of the canonical tales of homosexual love in China. This king had a favorite named Lord Long Yang, with whom he enjoyed fishing. One day, Long Yang began to weep. When questioned, Long Yang said he saw his own future in how he had treated a fish. Happy to have the catch at first, Long Yang had wanted to throw it back when he caught a better fish. He wept, "I am also a previously caught fish! I will also be thrown back!" To show his fidelity to Long Yang, the King declared that, "Anyone who dares to speak of other beauties will be executed along with his entire family."[1]

[edit] Wei in astronomy

There is two opinions about the representing star of Wei in Chinese astronomy. The opinions are :

[edit] References

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