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At the end of the Spring and Autumn Period, the countries were annexed, and the remaining major powers were mainly Qin in the west, Jin in the north of the Central Plains, Qi and Yan in the east, and Chu, Wu, and Yue in the south. In the early Warring States period, all of the above-mentioned powers, except for Wu, which was destroyed by Yue in 473 BC, were all preserved. The Qin and Yan states were weaker, and the stronger ones were the four kingdoms of Jin, Qi, Chu, and Yue.
In 453 B.C., Zhao, Wei, and Han were divided into three families. In 333 BC, Chu destroyed Yue. In the middle of the Warring States period, the pattern of the seven kingdoms of Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin gradually took shape.
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During the Spring and Autumn Period, the countries were merged, and many vassal states divided by the Zhou royal family perished and reorganized, and finally formed seven vassal states with greater influence and strength. Theoretically, all seven have the potential to unify the country.
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It's a boring question, like asking why you exist, and if it does, then the answer is the law of natural development.
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Report you, pointless watering.
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1. The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period, the collective name of the seven most powerful vassal states during the Warring States Period, namely: Qin, Chu, Qi, Yan, Zhao, Wei, and Korea.
2. After the protracted and long-term 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 it had existed in name only. The vassal states attacked each other, and wars continued. After the three families were divided, Zhao, Wei, and South Korea were among the powerful countries, and there were Tian Dynasty Qi, and the pattern of the Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period was formally formed, namely:
Qin, Chu, Qi, Yan, Zhao, Wei, Korea.
3. In addition to the Warring States Qiqing Zhixiong, there are also Yue, Pakistan, Shu, Song, Zhongshan, Lu and other large countries. 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.
In addition to the Qin State, the other six countries are all east of the Kunshan Mountain, so it is called the "Six Kingdoms of Shandong".
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The Five Hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period refer to the Duke of Qi Huan, the Duke of Song Xiang, the Duke of Wen of Jin, the Duke of Qin Mu and the King of Chuzhuang, that is to say, the country represented by these five kings was hegemonic in the Spring and Autumn Period.
The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refer to: Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin.
In the early Warring States period, Wei Wenhou appointed Li Kui to implement the law change, and implemented social reform earlier, making Wei the first strong country, and successively defeated Qin (before the change), Qi, and Zhao, and one family dominated, but later the battle of Maling was defeated by Qi and declined.
The strongest of the Seven Heroes in the middle period were the three kingdoms of Qi, Chu, and Qin. The three countries all have the strength to compete for hegemony and dominate the world. But later, the Qi State failed to destroy Yan, and was almost destroyed by Yan by Qin, although he won in the end, but his vitality was greatly damaged from then on.
Although the state of Chu was strong, after encountering a few stupid monarchs, he did not want to forge ahead, endured humiliation, and secretly sued for peace, and it was weakened.
In the later period, everyone knew that the Qin family was dominant, swept Liuhe, and finally unified the world.
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It refers to the seven powerful states of the Warring States period.
They are Zhao, Wei, Han, Qin, Chu, Yan, and Qi, which can be recorded as homophonic: Zhao Wei shouted to act in person.
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The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refer to the seven vassal states of Qin, Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, and Wei.
In addition to these seven heyday great princes, there were also some other small vassal states during the Warring States period, such as Song, Wei, Zhongshan, Lu, Zheng, etc.
During the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, there was a saying of "the five hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period and the seven heroes of the Warring States".
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The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refer to the seven strongest vassal states of the Warring States Period, and also represent different cultural systems (Chu culture, Qi culture, Qin culture, Sanjin culture, Yan culture) in addition to Zhou culture. After numerous annexation wars during the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476 BC), the number of vassal states was greatly reduced. By the Warring States period (475 BC to 221 BC), the seven most powerful vassal states were Qin, Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, and Wei, and these seven states were known by historians as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".
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Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, Qin, seven countries.
Because Wei was the first country to implement the reform, the leader was Li Xian, and the subsequent Shang Yang reform was also based on his reform.
Wei Wei Wenhou - Great Liang.
Wei Wenhou, Ji surname, Wei family, Mingsi. One is all. >>>More
Mainly because of the success of the Shang Martingale Reform. >>>More
The situation you appear in should not be in the state of Chu. If you are still the flag of Qin. It is likely that you have reached the border between the states of Chu and Qin. Just fly down and you're good to go. If you are the flag of the state of Chu. It is quite possible to say that the country was transferred.
The coins of the Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refer to the seven strongest vassal states of the Warring States Period, which are the currencies of the seven countries of Qin, Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, and Wei. >>>More