-
Yan: The capital city of Ji (Tianjin Jixian County), the territory of today's northern Hebei, Beijing, Tianjin, southern Liaoning, parts of Inner Mongolia, and later expanded to the Korean Peninsula. Zhao:
The capital city of Handan (Handan, Hebei) includes parts of central and southern Hebei, northern and eastern Shanxi, northern Henan, and western Shandong. Qi: The capital city of Linzi (Zibo, Shandong), the territory includes most of Shandong, southeastern Hebei (a small area), northern Jiangsu, northern Anhui, etc.
Wei: The capital city of Anyi, later moved to Daliang (Kaifeng, Henan), and its territory included the southern part of Shanxi (a small area), the central and eastern parts of Henan, and the northwestern part of Anhui. HAN:
The capital city of Pingyang (Linfen, Shanxi) was later moved to Xinzheng (Xinzheng, Henan), and its territory included central Shanxi, western Henan, and southeastern Shaanxi. Chu: The capital city of Ying (Jingzhou, Hubei), later moved to Shouchun (Shou County, Anhui), the largest territory included Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, part of Guizhou, Chongqing, southern Henan, central and southern Anhui, southwestern Shandong, southern Jiangsu, and northern Zhejiang.
Qin: Du Chengyong, Shang Ying moved to Xianyang after the reform. The territory includes most of Shaanxi, southwest Shanxi (a small area), western Henan (a small area), southeastern Gansu, and part of Sichuan.
-
Qi Shandong. Chu Hubei.
Yan, Hebei, Beijing.
Han Henan. The capital of Zhao was located in the southeast of present-day Taiyuan, Shanxi, and was later moved to Handan, Hebei.
The former capital of the Wei Dynasty was located in the northwest of Xia County, Shanxi, and was later moved to Kaifeng, Henan.
Qin, Shaanxi.
-
Seven Kingdoms: Qi, Chu, Yan, Korea, Zhao, Wei, and Qin.
The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period (475-22l BC) in ancient China are the collective names of the seven stronger vassal states in the Warring States Period in China, the number of vassal states was greatly reduced by numerous wars in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and in the late Warring States period, only seven stronger vassal states remained, namely Qi, Chu, Yan, Korea, Zhao, Wei, and Qin, collectively known as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".
In addition to the Seven Heroes of the Warring States, there were also large countries such as Yue, Ba, Shu, Song, Zhongshan, and Lu. There are still Zheng Guo, Wei Guo, Teng Guo, Zou Guo, Fei Guo, etc., but their strength and influence are far inferior to the Seven Heroes of the Warring States, and they can only survive in the cracks of the powerful countries, and they are all destroyed by the Seven Heroes in the end. Among the seven heroes, the Qin State was the strongest in the later period.
With the exception of Qin, the other six kingdoms were all east of the Kushan Mountains. Therefore, the six countries are also known as the six countries of Shandong".
-
Ann in a first-come, first-served order.
Han, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan, Qi, Qin.
-
The "Seven Heroes of the Warring States" refers to the collective name of the seven powerful vassal states of the late Eastern Zhou Dynasty in China, namely Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin.
-
Chu, Qi, Qin, Yan, Wei, Zhao, Korea.
Qin Guo: Win surname, ancestor Boyi.
Chu State: The surname Mi, the ancestor bear.
Tian Qi: The surname of the concubine, the Tian family, the ancestor Tian Wan.
Zhao Guo: Win surname, Zhao family, the ancestor made the father.
Yan Guo: The surname Ji, the ancestor called the public to send
Wei Guo: Ji surname, Wei family, ancestor Bi Gonggao.
South Korea: Ji surname, Han family, ancestor Han Wu Ziwan.
-
By the Warring States period, the seven most powerful vassal states were Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin, and these seven states were known as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".
-
The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period, the collective name of the seven most powerful vassal states in the Warring States Period, after the protracted war for hegemony in the Spring and Autumn Period, the number of vassal states in the territory of the Zhou Dynasty was greatly reduced, and the Zhou royal family was nominally the co-lord of the world, but in fact it was almost destroyed, and the vassal states attacked each other and fought constantly. The seven kingdoms are absolutely sweet potatoes: Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin.
Capital: 1. Linzi: Qi was the largest country in the East in the Zhou Dynasty, and Linzi was extremely prosperous in history as its capital.
2. Ying: Ying, the capital of the vassal state of Chu during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, is in the west of Hubei Province, and is located in the south of Jinancheng, about three kilometers north of Jingzhou District, Jingzhou City. 3, Jicheng:
In 1046 B.C., after King Wu of Zhou destroyed the Shang, the feudal clan summoned the prince to the Yan Kingdom, which is located in the Liuli River in Fangshan District, Beijing, which is the beginning of the establishment of the capital of Beijing. 4. Xinzheng: South Korea's territory mainly includes the southwestern part of present-day Shanxi and the northern part of Henan.
5. Handan: Handan was the capital of Zhao during the Warring States Period, and Handan was an important castle for the competition of other countries as early as the Spring and Autumn Period. 6. Girder:
Daliang City, the capital of Wei during the Warring States Period, in 365 BC, King Hui of Wei moved the capital here and built a city. 7. Xianyang: In 350 years ago, Qin Xiaogong moved the capital from Liyang to Xianyang, and built wings and palaces here.
-
The Seven Kingdoms refer to the Seven Heroes of the Warring States. They are the State of Qin, the State of Qi, the State of Korea, the State of Zhao, the State of Wei Chanyuan, the State of Shushu Chu, and the State of Yan.
Brief introduction of the Seven Nations.
In the Qin State, Shang moved the capital to Xianyang after the reform of the law. The territory included present-day Shaanxi, southwestern Shanxi, western Henan, southeastern Gansu, and Sichuan.
The capital of Qi was Linzi, and its territory included parts of present-day Shandong, southeastern Hebei, northern Jiangsu, and northern Anhui.
In South Korea, the capital was Pingyang, and later moved to Xinzheng, and its territory included the central part of present-day Shanxi, the western part of Henan, and the southeastern part of Shaanxi.
The state of Zhao, with its capital city of Handan, included parts of present-day central and southern Hebei, northern and eastern Shanxi, northern Henan, and western Shandong.
The Wei State, the capital city of Anyi, later moved to Daliang, the territory includes the southwestern part of present-day Shanxi, the central and eastern parts of Henan, and the northwest of Anhui.
The state of Chu, the capital of Ying, was the capital of Hebi, and its territory included the central part of present-day Henan, Anhui, northern Jiangsu, southeastern Shaanxi, and southeastern Shandong.
The territory of the Yan Kingdom, the capital of Ji, included the northern part of present-day Hebei, Beijing, Tianjin, southern Liaoning, and parts of Inner Mongolia, and later expanded to the Korean Peninsula.