What happened to the 19 vassal states of the Qing Dynasty more than 200 years ago?

Updated on history 2024-04-25
11 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The end result of these nineteen vassal states was that most of them took their own place and became a new state.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The nineteen vassal states of the Qing Dynasty are no longer part of our country, some of them have become independent, and some have been annexed by other countries.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    In 1885, in the year of Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty, China and France signed the "Sino-French New Treaty", and the Qing State was forced to give up its status as the suzerainty of Vietnam and recognized Vietnam as an independent country. Today, Vietnam is an independent country, next to Yunnan and Guangxi in our country.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Take Vietnam, for example, which used to be a vassal state of our country, and now it is an independent country, next to our Yunnan and Guangxi.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Nowadays, most of these separated places do not belong to our country, but have been occupied by other countries.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    In 1636, Huang Taiji personally led an army of 100,000 to conquer Korea, all the way like a bamboo, such as entering a no-man's land, only 12 days to the capital of North Korea. After that, Joseon became a vassal state of the Qing Dynasty and continued to do so until modern times. It was not until after the First Sino-Japanese War that China lost its status as the suzerainty of Korea.

    Today, the original North Korea is divided into two countries, North Korea and South Korea.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It is said that there were about 26 vassal kings, and the descendants of these 26 vassal kings later became a huge group by the end of the Ming Dynasty.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    As long as it is the son of the prince, except for the eldest son to inherit the title of prince, the other sons can basically be crowned county kings, so by the end of the Ming Dynasty, the scale of county kings exceeded 600.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    In the last years of the Ming Dynasty, there were probably dozens of vassal kings, all of whom were fighting for the world for their own interests.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    At the end of the Ming Dynasty, there were 27 vassal kings, but there were tens of thousands of county kings and members of the imperial family, so the annual expenses of the imperial court were very high.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The vassal system of the Ming Dynasty was divided into two periods. In the first stage, during the time of Zhu Yuanzhang, the vassal king had only 5,000 to 30,000 palace guards, and stipulated that he could be responsible for all affairs in the event of foreign invasion. In the second stage, after Zhu Di, the vassal king only had a prominent status and wealth, and had no real power.

    A brief description of the fiefs of the vassal kings of the Ming Dynasty.

    King of Jin: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Taiyuan Mansion, Shanxi.

    King Yan: The son of the Ming Taizu, the feudal state was established in Beiping, and later the imperial lineage, which was the ancestor of the Ming Dynasty.

    King of Zhou: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he was first named King of Wu, founded in Qiantang Mansion, Zhejiang, and later changed his title to King Zhou, and founded the country in Kaifeng Mansion, Henan, the former capital of the Northern Song Dynasty.

    King of Chu: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Wuchang Mansion, Huguang.

    King of Qi: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, who established a vassal state in Qingzhou, was imprisoned in Beijing for his crimes, and was soon officially deposed as a concubine, canceled the title of King of Qi, and the vassal state was also abolished.

    King Lu: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Yanzhou, Shandong.

    King of Shu: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Chengdu, Sichuan.

    King Xiang: The son of the ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Jingzhou Mansion, Huguang, and was later convicted of cutting off the title of King of Xiang and abolishing the feudal state.

    Acting king: Ming Taizuzi, first named King Yu, later renamed as acting king, built a vassal state in Taiyuan, Shanxi.

    King Su: Ming Taizu, first named King of Han, later renamed King Su, initially built a vassal state in Pingliang Mansion, then a vassal state in Ganzhou Mansion, and later built a vassal state in Lanzhou Mansion, Gansu.

    King of Liao: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he was first named the King of Wei, and was first established in Guangning Mansion, Liaoning, and later established a feudal kingdom in Jingzhou Mansion, Huguang.

    King Qing: The son of the Ming Taizu, he established a vassal state in Ningxia Wei (now Yinchuan City, Ningxia).

    King Ning: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he first established a vassal state in Daningwei, and later established a vassal state in Nanchang Mansion, Jiangxi.

    King Min: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he first established a vassal state in Minzhou Mansion in Gansu Province, and later established a vassal state in Wugang Mansion in Huguang.

    King of the Valley: The son of the Emperor of the Ming Dynasty, he initially established the vassal state in Shanggu Xuanfu (now Xuanhua County, Hebei), and later rebuilt the vassal state in Changsha. After a coup d'état, he was convicted of stripping the title of King Gu and abolishing the feudal state.

    King Han: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he first established the vassal state in Kaiyuan, and later rebuilt the vassal state in Pingliang Mansion (now Pingliang County, Gansu).

    King Shen: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in the open source Luzhou Mansion (now Changzhi City, Shanxi).

    King An: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Pingliang Mansion (now Pingliang City, Gansu).

    Tang Wang: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Nanyang Mansion, Henan.

    King Ying: The ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, he established a vassal state in Huguang'an Lufu.

    King Yi: The son of Ming Taizu, built a vassal state in Luoyang Mansion, Henan, and cut off the title of King Yi during the reign of Ming Shizong and abolished the feudal state.

    King Jingjiang (nephew of Zhu Yuanzhang, Taizu of the Ming Dynasty): established a vassal state in Guilin, Guangxi.

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