During the Warring States Period, the heroes stood side by side, what was the order of their demise?

Updated on history 2024-07-28
19 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Korea, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan, Qi, Qin.

    The Battle of the Six Kingdoms of Qin, also known as the Battle of the Six Kingdoms of Qin, the War of the Unification of the Qin Dynasty, the Unification of the Six Kingdoms of the Qin Dynasty, the Unification of China by the Qin Dynasty, and the Unification of the Six Kingdoms, refers to the war of the Qin State, one of the seven major vassal states at the end of the Warring States Period of China, to eliminate the Six Kingdoms of Shandong and complete the unification of China.

    In 238 BC, Qin Wangzheng eliminated the group of Prime Minister Lü Buwei and Changxin Hou Changyu and began to govern pro-government. With the assistance of Li Si, Wei Yi and others, Qin Wangzheng formulated the strategy of "destroying the princes, becoming the emperor, and unifying the world". The specific measures are:

    envelop Yan Qi, stabilize Wei Chu, and eliminate Han Zhao; Distant and close attacks, break them one by one.

    From the attack on Korea in 230 BC to the end of the destruction of Qi in 221 BC, a total of 10 years, successively eliminated the six kingdoms of Han, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan and Qi according to Shun, ending the situation of more than 500 years of division and dispute among the princes of China since the Spring and Autumn Period, and establishing the first monarchical centralized state in Chinese history, that is, the Qin Dynasty.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    The Qin State successively destroyed the six kingdoms of Han, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan, and Qi, and unified the whole country.

    1. In 246 BC, King Yingzheng of Qin ascended the throne, and because of his young age, the government was controlled by the Empress Dowager and Xiangguo Lü Buwei and Chang Poison.

    2. In 238 BC (the ninth year of the reign of King Qin), King Qin was in charge of the government, got rid of Lü, Chang and others, reused Li Si and Wei Yi, and began to unify the strategy of the Six Kingdoms.

    3. In 230 BC, the Qin faction led the army to attack Han and captured Han Wang Bo?

    4. In 229 BC, Qin sent the general Wang Jian to lead the army to attack Zhao, and in 228 BC, the Qin army entered Handan, and the king of Zhao surrendered with a map, and Zhao died.

    5. In 225 BC, Qin sent Wang Ben to lead his troops to attack Wei, diverting river water and ditch water to irrigate the Wei capital Liang, the king of Wei faked surrender, and Wei died.

    6. In 223 BC, Qin sent Wang Jian to lead 600,000 troops to attack Chu, and the king of Chu was wounded and captured, and Chu died. As early as 227 BC, Prince Yan had sent Jing Ke to assassinate the King of Qin, but it was not successful, Qin took the opportunity to capture the Yan capital Sucheng in 226 BC, and the King of Yan moved to Liaodong, and in 222 BC, Qin attacked Liaodong, captured Yan Wangxi, and Yan died.

    7. In 221 BC (the 26th year of the reign of King Qin), Qin sent Wang Ben to lead his troops to attack Qi from north to south, captured Qi Wang Jian, and died in Qi.

    8. At this point, Qin finally annexed all the six countries and completed the great cause of unifying the whole country. Hope.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Standard Answer] Korea, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan, Qi, Qin.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    What? Han Wei, Chu Yan, Zhao Qi Qin.

    In 222 BC, Zhao Yan was completely destroyed.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Shout (Han) Zhao (Zhao) Wei (Wei) to (Chu) to play (Yan) drama (Qi).

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    1. All of them are acceptable.

    If you want to correspond to the direction, the two are linked together to make it easier to remember, the second type may be more convenient:

    Country: Qi, Chu, Qin, Yan, Zhao, Wei, Han.

    Directions: East, South, West, North, Up, Center, Bottom.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Han Zhao Wei Chu Yan Qi Qin, this is the order of Qin's annihilation of the Six Kingdoms.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    There is nothing in the right order.

    The Seven Heroes are standing side by side.

    You see, whichever is smoother, which is which.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    A specific period of Chinese history. The Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period (770 BC, 221 BC) is also known as the Eastern Zhou Period. During the Western Zhou Dynasty, Zhou Tianzi maintained the authority of the co-lord of the world.

    After King Ping moved eastward, the Eastern Zhou Dynasty began, and the Zhou Dynasty began to decline, only retaining the name of the co-lord of the world, but not the actual control ability. Due to the different social and economic conditions of the countries of the Central Plains, a situation of competition for hegemony between major powers has emerged, and the merger and hegemony of various countries have contributed to the unification of various regions. Therefore, the great social upheaval in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty prepared the conditions for national unification.

    The Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period were divided into the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. The Spring and Autumn Period, referred to as Spring and Autumn Period, refers to 770-476 BC, which is a period belonging to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.

    In the Spring and Autumn Period, the power of the King of Zhou weakened, and the princes were in dispute, and the Duke of Qi Huan, the Duke of Wen of Jin, the Duke of Xiang of Song, the Duke of Qin Mu, and the King of Chuzhuang successively claimed hegemony, and the history called the Five Hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period (another theory believes that the Five Hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period are the Duke of Qi Huan, the Duke of Wen of Jin, the King of Chuzhuang, the King of Wu, and the King of Yue, Goujian). The Warring States Period, referred to as the Warring States Period, refers to 475 BC 221 BC, which was a period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty in Chinese history (before the unification of the Central Plains by Qin), when various countries fought endlessly, so it was called "Warring States" by later generations. The name "Warring States" is taken from the "Warring States Policy" compiled by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty.

    Spring and Autumn (770-476 BC), Warring States (475-221 BC). In general, the historical circles regard the three families divided into Jin and the Tian dynasty as the dividing line of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. Regarding the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, there have been different ways of saying it:

    or take the 14th year of Lu Aigong (481 BC), the year of the last year of the Spring and Autumn Period, as the lower limit of the Spring and Autumn Period; Or the first year of King Yuan of Zhou (475 BC) as the first year of the Warring States Period, or the first year of King Zhending of Zhou (468 BC).

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The seven states were, in no particular order: Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin.

    Among them, Yan Guo has always been located in a corner, and its strength is weak. South Korea is in the land of four wars and has not been able to develop. The other five countries all had strong histories.

    Chu State, Chu State has always been able to rank in the top three among the Warring States States, until the end of the Warring States Period, when the Qin Emperor destroyed the Chu State, he had to send 600,000 troops to finally destroy Chu.

    The State of Qi, before Le Yi led the Yan army to attack the State of Qi, had always been the overlord of the Central Plains. In the early Warring States period, he fought for hegemony with Wei for a long time, and defeated Wei through the two wars of Guiling and Maling. He once exchanged emperors with the Qin State (called each other emperors. A large country that has been able to rank in the top three for a long time.

    Qi Chu has always been strong, Han Yan has always been weak, and the main ones that have changed are Qin, Zhao, and Wei.

    Wei was once the first overlord of the Central Plains. Because the three families inherited the most Jin resources during the Jin period, they were always the leaders of the Three Jin Alliances (Han, Zhao, and Wei) in the early Warring States period. Moreover, Wei was the first country to implement the law change, and the early Wei State was very strong, and Wei Wenhou and Wei Wuhou father and son were all a generation of British lords.

    During the period of Wei Wenhou, he even prepared to destroy the Qin State in the west, and the general Wu Qi defeated the Qin army of 500,000 in the Battle of Yin and Jin, built the Hexi Fortress, and occupied the territory of the Qin State for nearly a hundred years. In short, the Wei State was very strong in the early stage, but the problem was that the Wei State had always had contradictions with Han and Zhao, and the geographical location of the Wei State was not good, and it had always been vulnerable to the attacks of the Qi State and the Chu State, so it gradually declined during the reign of King Hui of Wei.

    Zhao Guo. Zhao was a medium-sized country in the early period, but in the late Warring States period, due to the change of King Wuling, Hu Fu cavalry and shooting, and Zhao Di's male martial arts, his military strength was very strong, and he was the only country that could compete with Qin in the late Warring States period. After the defeat of the landmark Battle of Changping in the later period, Zhao also defeated Qin many times.

    Even before his demise, the general Li Mudu had repeatedly inflicted heavy losses on the Qin army.

    There is also the state of Qin. The early Qin state was not strong, and due to the backward social system, the situation deteriorated. It was not until around 385 BC that Qin Xiangong returned to Qin from Wei as a hostage, and began to rectify the government.

    Xiaogong is the son of Xiangong, and Xiaogong began to change the law soon after he ascended the throne, which has a lot to do with the preparation of Xiangong in the early stage. Later, needless to say, the Qin State became stronger and stronger through the reforms, encroaching on the world and finally unifying China.

    Therefore, the following divisions can be roughly made.

    Early stage: Chu, Qi, Wei, Qin, Zhao, Yan, Han.

    Later period: Qin, Chu, Zhao, Qi, Yan, Wei, Han.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Qin, Chu, Qi, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei. Among them, the Qin State is the strongest

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period is the collective name of the seven vassal states of the Warring States Period in ancient China. Numerous wars during the Spring and Autumn period greatly reduced the number of vassal states. By the Warring States Period, the seven most powerful vassal states were Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin, and these seven countries were known as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".

    Among the seven vassal states, Qin was the strongest. 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 "Shandong Six".

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    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.

    Among them, the Jin State was annexed between the six Qings, and in 453 BC, the situation of "three families divided into Jin" was formed in Zhao, Wei and Han, known as the "Three Jin". The Three Jin were the most powerful in the early Warring States period, and often combined forces to attack other countries. In 403 BC, Zhou Tianzi officially appointed Sanjin as princes.

    Since 481 BC, Chen Chengzi Chen Heng (also known as Tian Heng) killed Qi Jiangong and was good at Qi politics, forming a situation of "Tian Dynasty Qi". However, in the early Warring States period, Qi's strength was temporarily weaker than that of the Three Jins. Although the state of Chu expanded slightly to the east, its northward march to compete with the Three Jin Dynasty for Zheng was defeated.

    After the destruction of Wu, the Yue Kingdom was strong for a while, and after entering the Warring States period, due to long-term civil strife, the power declined. In 333 BC, it was defeated by Chu.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    After the three families were divided into Jin and Tian clans, the situation of the seven heroes standing side by side was formed.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    How did the situation of the Seven Heroes of the Warring States come about?

    Since the Western Zhou Dynasty divided the princes, there have been many candidate states on the historical map of China. However, after more than 300 years of wars for hegemony in the Spring and Autumn Period, large countries annexed small countries, and strong countries annexed weak countries, and by the beginning of the Warring States period, there were only a few vassal states. The main ones are the seven great powers of Qi, Chu, Qin, Yan, Han, Zhao, and Wei.

    Among the Seven Kingdoms, Qi Chu and Qin Yan are already familiar to everyone. How was Han Zhaowei formed? During the Spring and Autumn period, the Jin state had disappeared from the map of the Warring States period, and was replaced by the three vassal states of Han, Zhao, and Wei.

    It turned out that the Jin State had been divided between its three doctors, the Han family, the Zhao family, and the Wei family, and was divided into three, forming the three vassal states of Han, Zhao, and Wei. History calls this thing"Three families are divided".At the same time, the Tian clan, the great doctor of the Qi State, seized the power of the original Jiang clan (the descendants of Jiang Taigong), which was called in history"Tian Dai Qi".

    However, after the Tian family replaced Qi, the country of Qi was still called the country of Qi.

    Historically, these seven powerful countries were called the Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period, and the juxtaposition of the Seven Heroes was the basic situation of the Warring States Period.

    The foundation was laid for the unification of the country.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    After a long period of war for hegemony in the Spring and Autumn Period, by the time of the Warring States Period, there were only a few vassal states, and the main vassal states were Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin, known as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States" in history.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period is the collective name of the seven vassal states of the Warring States Period in ancient China. Numerous wars during the Spring and Autumn period greatly reduced the number of vassal states. By the Warring States Period, the seven most powerful vassal states were Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao, Wei, and Qin, and these seven countries were known as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".

    Among the seven vassal states, Qin was the strongest. 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 "Shandong Six".

    The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period stood side by side at the same time, and no one dominated for a while, which was different from the Spring and Autumn Five Hegemons.

    The Spring and Autumn Period (770 BC - 476 BC) or the Spring and Autumn Period, referred to as the Spring and Autumn Period. A period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty. In the Spring and Autumn Period, the power of the King of Zhou weakened, and the heroes were in dispute, and the Duke of Qi Huan, the Duke of Wen of Jin, the Duke of Xiang of Song, the Duke of Qin Mu, and the King of Chuzhuang successively claimed hegemony, known as the "Five Hegemons of the Spring and Autumn Period" in history.

    One said that it was the Duke of Qi Huan, the Duke of Wen of Jin, the King of Chuzhuang, the King of Wu, and the King of Yue. The Spring and Autumn period was followed by the Warring States period.

    The name of the Spring and Autumn period was given because Confucius revised the Spring and Autumn Period. This book records the history from the first year of Lu Yin (722 BC) to the fourteenth year of Lu Ai (481 BC). For the sake of convenience, modern scholars generally call it the "Spring and Autumn Period" from the founding of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty in the first year of King Ping of Zhou (770 BC) to the forty-fourth year of King Jing of Zhou (476 BC).

    The Warring States Period (475 BC 221 BC), or the Warring States Period, referred to as the Warring States Period, was a historical period in history that belonged to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty before Qin unified China. There are different controversies among historians about when the Warring States period began. The beginning of the Warring States period in the "Historical Records" was in 475 BC (the first year of King Yuan of Zhou), and the beginning of the Warring States period in the "Zizhi Tongjian" was in 403 BC (the three families of Han, Zhao and Wei were divided into Jin).

    The end of the Warring States period was the unification of China by Qin (221 BC). The name of the Warring States period comes from the "Warring States Policy" edited by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty.

    During the Warring States period, the society was very unstable. At the beginning of the Warring States period, there were still more than a dozen countries in China, but the smaller ones were soon annexed. The remaining seven great powers, Qin, Chu, Han, Zhao, Wei, Qi, and Yan, are known as the Seven Heroes of the Warring States.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refers to the collective name of the seven strongest vassal states of the Warring States Period in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (the combined name of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period) in history. During the Spring and Autumn Period (770 BC to 476 BC), numerous wars greatly reduced the number of vassal states, and by the Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC), the seven most powerful vassal states were Qi, Chu, Qin, Yan, Zhao, Wei, and Han, and these seven states were known by historians as the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States".

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    The Seven Heroes of the Warring States Period refers to the collective name of the seven strongest vassal states in the Warring States Period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty in history. During the Spring and Autumn Period, numerous wars greatly reduced the number of vassal states, and the seven most powerful vassal states in the Warring States Period were Qi, Chu, Qin, Yan, Zhao, Wei, and Han, and these seven states were called the "Seven Heroes of the Warring States" by historians.

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