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Five dynasties of the Jin Kingdom.
The predecessor of the Later Tang Dynasty, at the end of the Tang Dynasty, Li Keyong, the chief of the Shatuo tribe, occupied Jinyang, and the Tang Dynasty named him the king of Jin. Li Keyong took Zhaoyi (now Changzhi, Shanxi) in the south and Yunzhou (now Datong, Shanxi) in the north, seized Hedong, and confronted Zhu Quanzhong, who was powerful in the Central Plains. In the second year of Tianfu (902 AD), Zhu Quanzhong besieged Jinyang.
Li Ke held on to Jinyang with danger and repelled Zhu Quanzhong's attack. In the third year of Later Liang Longde (923 AD), Li Keyong's son Li Cunqiao relied on Jinyang to claim the emperor in Weizhou (now Hebei Daimyo), established the Later Tang Dynasty, destroyed the Later Liang, and the capital Luoyang, took Jinyang as the western capital, and soon reverted to Beijing.
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Jin. 1033 BC – 376 BC), Zhou dynasty.
The son of King Wu of Zhou was surnamed Ji, and Li Chu of Zhou was named a marquis by Zhou Tianzi, and Ji's surname was Jin, and the first monarch Tang Shuyu was Ji Fa, King Wu of Zhou.
The son of Zhou Cheng, the younger brother of King Ji Yu of Zhou Cheng. The country name was Tang at the beginning, and it was changed to Jin after Tang Shuyu's son Xie ascended the throne.
Brother of Tongye. Tang Shuyu's mother, Yi Jiang, the queen of King Wu of Zhou, was the daughter of Jiang Taigong, and legend has it that one night Yi Jiang dreamed that the heavens said to King Wu of Zhou: "I will let you give birth to a son named Yu, and I will give Tang to him later."
When Yi Jiang gave birth to the baby, he saw that the word "Yu" was written on the palm of his hand, so he named his son Yu.
When Zhou became king, there was civil strife in the Tang Kingdom, and the Duke of Zhou.
Extinguished Don. One day, King Zhou Cheng and Yu played a game, and King Zhou Cheng cut a leaf of a paulownia tree into the shape of a chain oak and gave it to Yu and said, "I will use this to seal you."
Shi Yi then asked to choose an auspicious day to seal Yu as a prince. King Zhou Cheng said: "I'm joking with him!
Shi Yi said: "The Son of Heaven has no jokes. As long as it is said, the historian should write it down truthfully, complete it according to etiquette, and sing it with music.
King Zhou Cheng gave Tang land to Yu, so he was called Tang Shuyu. Yu's son Xie changed the name of the country to Jin after succeeding to the throne, which was for the Marquis Xie of Jin.
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During the Western Zhou Dynasty, the first generation of monarchs of the Jin Kingdom was Tang Shuyu, the son of King Ji Fa of Zhou Wu, and the same brother of Wang Ji Yu in the middle of the week. The country name was Tang at the beginning, and after Tang Shuyu's son Xie ascended the throne, he changed Qiaobu to Jin.
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The monarchs of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States and Jin Kingdoms were: Ji Yijiu (858 BC-841 BC), Ji Situ (840 BC-823 BC), Ji Ji (822 BC-812 BC), King Ji Fei (811 BC-785 BC), Ji Qiu (805 BC-746 BC), Ji Boyan (784 BC-781 BC), Ji Ping (739 BC-724 BC), Ji Hao (723-718 BC) and so on.
Marquis Jing of Jin (Ji Yijiu) was the sixth ruler of the Western Zhou vassal state of Jin and the son of Marquis of Jin. In the seventeenth year of the Marquis of Jin Jing (842 BC), the old Qi Zhou Li King was brutal and unkind, and the Zhou people drove him out of Haojing, so that the Duke of Zhou and the Duke of Zhao were in charge of the country together, which was known as the "Republic" in history. Marquis Jing of Jin died the following year, reigning for 18 years.
The Marquis of Jin (Ji Situ), also known as the Marquis of Jin, surnamed Ji and named Situ, was the seventh monarch of the Western Zhou Dynasty vassal state of Jin. The Marquis of Jin is the son of the Marquis of Jin Jing and the father of the Marquis of Jin. Because of the name of the Marquis of Jin Dynasty, there was a saying that he avoided it, so he abolished the official position of Situ at that time, and called it the Chinese army during the period of Duke Wen of Jin.
Ji Ji, the son of the Marquis of Jin,. In the thirty-third year of the king of Zhou, the king of Zhou toured east to the Jin country, and the Marquis of Jin led the army of the Jin state to follow, and was ordered by the king to conquer the Shuyi in present-day Shandong. The king of Zhou directly gave instructions to the Marquis of Jin Xian, and after obtaining Eryi, the king of Zhou personally inspected the base field of Zhanwang, and the Jin army won a complete victory.
Wang Cisu Zhong was buried in the cemetery of the Marquis of Jinxian. Wang Ci Su Zhong, the first appearance of the Jin army's edge to defeat the enemy, Jin Xianhou also went down in history.
Jin Muhou, also known as the father of Jin Marquis, surnamed Ji, named King Fei (also known as Fusheng and King Xi), is the son of Jin Xianhou. In the eleventh year of the Marquis of Jin Xian (812 BC), the Marquis of Jin Xian died, and King Fei succeeded to the throne of the monarch of the Jin State, which was the Marquis of Jin Mu. After Mu Hou died, his younger brother Uncle Yan became self-reliant, and the crown prince ran away.
Han Wan, the grandson of Muhou, is the ancestor of Korea of the Seven Heroes of the Warring States.
Marquis Wen of Jin (805 BC - 746 BC), surnamed Ji, named Qiu, son of Marquis Mu of Jin, brother of Uncle Qu Wohuan, and the eleventh monarch of the Jin Kingdom from the Western Zhou Dynasty to the early Spring and Autumn Period. In 746 BC, Marquis Wen of Jin died and was buried in the cemetery of Marquis of Jin in the south of Beizhao Village, Quwo County, Shanxi Province. After the death of Marquis Wen of Jin, his son Bo succeeded to the throne as Marquis Zhao of Jin.
The 24 histories include: "Historical Records", "Book of Han", "Book of Later Han", "Chronicles of the Three Kingdoms", "Book of Jin", "Book of Song", "Book of Southern Qi", "Book of Liang", "Book of Chen", "History of the South", "History of the North", "Book of Wei", "Book of Northern Qi", "Book of Northern Zhou", "Book of Sui", "Book of the Old Tang Dynasty", "Book of the New Tang Dynasty", "History of the Old Five Dynasties", "History of the New Five Dynasties", "History of the Song Dynasty", "History of Liao", "History of Jin", "History of Yuan", and "History of Ming". >>>More
The Northern and Southern Dynasties were the countries after the Three Kingdoms and the Two Jin Dynasty, and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms were after the Tang Dynasty, not referring to one dynasty, and there were many countries coexisting during this period, just like the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. >>>More
The Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms were the era between the Tang Dynasty and the Song Dynasty. The Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms do not refer to a single dynasty, but to a special historical period between the Tang and Song dynasties. The Five Dynasties refer to the regimes that changed in succession in the Later Liang, Later Tang, Later Jin, Later Han, and Later Five Dynasties. >>>More
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, generally referred to as Five Dynasties. After the fall of the Tang Dynasty, the Later Liang, Later Tang, Later Jin, Later Han and Later Five dynasties appeared in the Central Plains, as well as more than a dozen regimes in Xishu, Jiangnan, Lingnan and Hedong, collectively known as the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms. The "Five Dynasties" are more biased towards these five dynasties located in the Central Plains, and orthodox historians generally call the Five Dynasties the ** Dynasty. >>>More
The history of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms is too fragmented and lacks historical main characters. Excludes ten countriesThe five dynasties have a total history of fifty-three years, and in such a short period of time, there have been nine surnames and fourteen emperorsThe frequency of change of this kind of Dawang Banner can be said to be unprecedented in ancient times, and the period in Chinese history that can be compared with the Five Dynasties period is only the Sixteen Kingdoms of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. >>>More