King Goujian of Yue

"Yue Wang Gou Jian" redirects here. For the television series, see The Rebirth of a King.
King Goujian of Yue
越王勾踐

Historical drawing of King Goujian of Yue
King of Yue
Reign 496–465 BC
Predecessor King Yunchang of Yue
Successor King Yuyi of Yue
Issue King Yuyi of Yue
Father King Yunchang of Yue
Goujian temple in Shaoxing

Goujian (Chinese: 勾踐) (reigned 496465 BC) was the king of the Kingdom of Yue (present-day northern Zhejiang) near the end of the Spring and Autumn Period. Goujian was the son of King Yunchang of Yue.

King Goujian's reign coincided with arguably the last major conflict of the Spring and Autumn Period, the struggle between Wu and Yue, wherein he eventually led his state to victory, annexing the rival. As such King Goujian is sometimes considered the last of the Five Hegemons.

War between Wu and Yue

The war between Wu and Yue comprised several separate phases. It was started when a Yue princess, who was married to one of the princes of the neighboring State of Wu, left her husband and fled back to the country of Yue. This became the spark for the war to come.

Upon the death of Yunchang and the accession of Goujian, King Helü of Wu seized the opportunity and launched an attack on Yue. At the Battle of Zuili (槜李之战), however, Yue defeated Wu, and King Helü was mortally wounded; before his death he instructed his son, King Fuchai of Wu, "Never forget Yue!" Yue would be defeated three years later by a resurgent Wu, and Goujian captured, to serve as Fuchai's servant for three years until he was eventually allowed to return to his native state.

Upon resuming his rule King Goujian quickly appointed skilled politicians as advisors, such as Wen Zhong and Fan Li, to help build up the kingdom. During this time, his ministers also worked to weaken the State of Wu internally through bribes and diplomatic intrigue.

Whilst ruling his kingdom, Goujian never relished kingly riches, but instead ate food suited for peasants, as well as forcing himself to taste bile, in order to remember his humiliations while serving under the State of Wu. The second half of a Chinese idiom, wòxīn-chángdǎn (臥薪嚐膽 "sleeping on sticks and tasting gall"), refers to Goujian's perseverance.

After ten years of economic and political reforms, the last phase of the war began, by which time the State of Yue had come a long way from its previous defeat; as described in the Shiji, Ten years of reforms; the state is rich, the warriors well-rewarded. The soldiers charge in the face of arrows like thirsty men heading for drink...

Taking advantage of Fuchai's expedition to his north to struggle with Jin for hegemony, Goujian led his army and successfully attacked the Wu capital, killing the Wu crown prince, You. In the 24th year of his reign (473 BC), Goujian led another expedition against Wu, laying siege to the capital for three years before it fell. When a surrender from Fuchai was refused, Fuchai committed suicide and Wu was annexed by Yue. After his victory, Goujian ruthlessly killed Fuchai's scholars, even those who helped him, not allowing himself to make the same mistake Fuchai had made by sparing the lives of his enemies.

King Goujian's army was known for scaring its enemies before battle because its front line consisted of criminals sentenced to death who committed suicide by decapitating themselves.[1] However, in the passage, "越王句踐使死士挑戰,三行,至吳陳,呼而自剄。" the literal translation of "死士" means, "soldiers willing to die," not, "criminals sentenced to death". "自剄" means to "commit suicide by cutting one's throat," which was a common way to end one's own life in Ancient China.[2]

Modern references

The war between the states of Yue and Wu is the subject of three television series:

The story is explored at depth in historian Paul Cohen's book Speaking to History: The Story of King Goujian in Twentieth Century China

See also

Notes and references

  1. Sima Qian, Shiji (史記), Ch. 41, 中華書局, 2006, p. 272.
  2. Shiji, second sentence of second paragraph in Chapter 41
Regnal titles
Preceded by
King Yunchang of Yue
King of the State of Yue
496 BC 465 BC
Succeeded by
King Shi of Yue
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