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  1. King Zhuangxiang of Qin (281– 6 July 247 BCE), personal names Yiren and Zichu, was the penultimate ruler of the Qin state during the third century BCE in the Warring States period of ancient China.

    • Zhuangxiang

      El rey Zhuangxiang de Qin (281–247 a. C.), de nombres...

    • King Zhaoxiang

      King Zhaoxiang of Qin (Chinese: 秦昭襄王; 325–251 BC), or King...

  2. El rey Zhuangxiang de Qin (281–247 a. C.), de nombres personales Yiren y Zichu, fue un gobernante del Estado Qin durante el III siglo a. C. en el período de los Reinos Combatientes de la Antigua China.

    • War Against Chu
    • War Against Han and Wei
    • Conquest of Yiqu
    • War Against Qi
    • War Against Zhao
    • Conquest of Eastern Zhou

    In 304 BC, King Zhaoxiang met with King Huai of Chu in Huangqi (黃棘) to negotiate an alliance, ceding Shangyong (上庸) as a gesture. In 303 BC, the states of Qi, Wei and Han broke off their previous alliance with Chu and invaded Chu, forcing Chu to send its crown prince Xiong Heng to Qin as a hostage in exchange for Qin assistance. King Zhaoxiang sent...

    In 301 BC, Qin again attacked Han, led by King Zhaoxiang's uncle, Wei Ran, and occupied the city of Rang (穰城). The city was later given to Wei Ran, who was made chancellor six years later, as his fief. However, in 298 BC, Qin suffered a setback at Hangu Pass under the combined attack from a three-state alliance of Qi, Han and Wei, and was forced to...

    Yiqu (義渠), also known as "the Rong of Yiqu" (義渠之戎), was a semi-pastoral, semi-agricultural people residing in the region from north of Jing River to western Hetao. They were historically an offshoot of the nomadic Qiang people living on the grasslands around Long Mountains during the Shang Dynasty, and were frequently at war with the surrounding no...

    The state of Qin actually did not share any borders with the state of Qi, but they nevertheless clashed with each other due to the complicated zong-heng diplomacy during the Warring States period. In 299 BC, King Zhaoxiang invited Lord Mengchang to Qin with the intention of appointing him as chancellor. However, after hearing (perhaps ill-intended)...

    In 283 BC, King Zhaoxiang offered to trade fifteen cities in exchange for the Heshibi jade, which was in the state of Zhao's possession. King Huiwen of Zhao was attracted by the offer and agreed to the trade. However, the Zhao ambassador Lin Xiangru (藺相如) figured out that Qin never meant to hold up their end of the deal, and managed to return the j...

    The authority of the Zhou court had been declining since the very beginning of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty. When King Ping of Zhou abandoned the old capital of Haojing and relocated east to Luoyi, the new capital's crown land (王畿) was significantly smaller and less developed compared to the old capital. The royal Zhou court, which had been humiliated ...

  3. Reign as King of Qin Regency A portrait painting of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of the Qin dynasty, from an 18th-century album of Chinese emperors' portraits. In 246 BC, when King Zhuangxiang died after a short reign of just three years, he was succeeded on the throne by his 13-year-old son.

  4. La dinastía Qin (chino antiguo: 秦朝 *d͡zin traw [1] , chino moderno: Ch'in ch'ao o Qíncháo ) fue la primera dinastía imperial de China, desde el año 221 a. C. hasta el 206 a. C. El nombre Qín, que tiene una pronunciación similar en español a "chin", es uno de los posibles orígenes de la palabra China, aunque esto continúa siendo ...

  5. www.wikiwand.com › es › ZhuangxiangZhuangxiang - Wikiwand

    El rey Zhuangxiang de Qin (281–247 a. C.), de nombres personales Yiren y Zichu, fue un gobernante del Estado Qin durante el III siglo a. C. en el período de los Reinos Combatientes de la Antigua China.

  6. 21 de dic. de 2017 · The Qin Dynasty was the first royal dynasty during the age of Imperial China. Qin achievements had a profound cultural impact on the dynasties that followed.