The relationship between the State of Qi and the State of Chu during the Spring and Autumn Period??

Updated on history 2024-07-26
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    In the early Warring States period, the relationship between Qi and Chu was neutral, and occasionally there would be no war because of a strong threat, and after the Qin State got up, Qi and Chu began to form an alliance, but Zhang Yi's lobbying broke this alliance, and the relationship between the two countries plummeted, and then the Chu State perished because of bribing the Qin State and had no land, and the Qi State remained neutral, and no one helped it, and finally broke itself.

    On the one hand, due to the power vacuum of the Jin State, both countries tried to establish the prestige of the Central Plains, and the three Jin Dynasty suppressed the Qin; On the other hand, they tried to jointly increase their chips and influence (the story about Zhang Yi's Chu is well known, and there is not much nonsense about Ziyou

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    It is an opponent in the struggle for supremacy.

    In 656 B.C., Duke Huan of Qi led his troops to attack Chu, and counted the two major crimes of Chu, one of which was the aforementioned "King Zhao's southern expedition did not return, and the widow was asked", and the other charge was: "Ergong Bao Mao is not a person, the king sacrifice is not a share, there is no way to shrink the wine, and the widow is a levy". It shows that the state of Chu did not pay tribute to the Zhou Dynasty on time for a long time.

    When the State of Chu was pressed by the heavy troops of the State of Qi, it was not afraid and was ready for battle. However, out of strategic considerations, he made an appropriate compromise and agreed to pay tribute, so he formed an alliance with Qi and withdrew his troops.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Chu. It first arose in the Hanjiang River Basin, roughly in Hubei, Hunan, Chongqing, Henan, Shandong, Anhui, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Zhejiang, Guizhou, and Guangdong. Ying, the capital of the state of Chu, was in today's Jingzhou, and was later forced by Qin to move Chen and Shouchun.

    The state of Chu (1115 BC - 223 BC) was a vassal state located in the Yangtze River valley during the pre-Qin period. During the reign of King Cheng of Zhou, Xiong Yi, the leader of the Chu people, was made a viscount and established the state of Chu.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    In the Spring and Autumn Period of the Chu State, the capital of the Chung Mu period was recorded in the book as Yingdu, and the current location is located in the north of Jingzhou, Hubei Province, 8 kilometers away from the city of Jinan City. There were once 20 kings of Nakuru Chu who used this as the capital, which lasted for more than 400 years

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    In fact, there was a post-Chu state in history. When the Qin Dynasty was destroyed, Xiang Yu was actually in power, and he assigned the belonging of the kings, such as Liu Bang into Shu, and he said that the descendants of the Six Kingdoms in the Qin Dynasty also divided the fiefs and titles, and when Liu Bang secretly settled Chen Cang, Chu and Han fought each other, so there are still those so-called King of Qi, King Leopard of Wei, etc.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    After the Qin state, it was divided into eighteen princes and kings.

    The overlord of Western Chu and Liu Bang were the king of Han and the most powerful, and they also competed for the world in the future, and history was dominated by them.

    After obtaining the consent of King Huai of Chu, Xiang Yu established himself as the overlord of Western Chu, named Liu Bang as the king of Han, Zhang Han as the king of Yong, Sima Xin as the king of Sai, Dong Peng as the king of Zhai, Wei Wangbao as the king of Western Wei, Shenyang as the king of Henan, Sima Weiyin as the king of Zhao, Zhang Er as the king of Changshan, Dangyang Jun Yingbu as the king of Jiujiang, Wu Rui as the king of Hengshan, Gongao as the king of Linjiang, Yan Wang Han Guang as the king of Liaodong, Zang Tu as the king of Yan, Qi Wang Tianshi as the king of Jiaodong, Tian Du as the king of Qi, Tian An as the king of Jibei and other eighteen princes and kings.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The state of Chu is an independent state that has appeared many times in Chinese history, and the state of Chu of the Three Kingdoms and the state of Daxin Chu are not the same country.

    During the Spring and Autumn Period, the state of Chu was a large country established in present-day Hubei Province and the surrounding areas of China from the 8th to the early 5th century BC.

    The state of Chu during the Three Kingdoms period refers to the Chu kingdom that established itself in the Jianghuai region at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty. At this time, the state of Chu was not the state of Chu in the Spring and Autumn Period, but belonged to a short-lived regime in Chinese history, which was different from the unification of the Spring and Autumn Period of Chu.

    1. Prosperity and brilliance.

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