Qi (state)
Qi | |||||
齊 *Dzəj | |||||
Duchy (1046–323 BC) Kingdom (323–221 BC) | |||||
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Qi in 260 BC | |||||
Capital | Linzi | ||||
Religion | Chinese folk religion ancestor worship | ||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||
Chancellor | |||||
• | 685–645 BC | Guan Zhong | |||
History | |||||
• | Enfeoffment of Duke Tai | 1046 BC | |||
• | Conquered by Qin | 221 BC | |||
Currency | Knife money | ||||
Qi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"Qi" in seal script (top), Traditional (middle), and Simplified (bottom) Chinese characters | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 齊 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 齐 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Qi (Chinese: 齊; Old Chinese: *[dz]ˤəj) was an ancient Chinese state during the Zhou dynasty of ancient China. Its capital was Linzi (present-day Zibo in Shandong).
Qi was founded around in 1046 BC as one of the many vassal states of the Zhou Dynasty. The first ruler of Qi was Jiang Ziya, the most powerful official during that time. The Jiang family ruled Qi for several centuries before it was replaced by the Tian family in 386 BC. In 221 BC, Qi was the last major state of pre-Imperial China to be conquered by the State of Qin, which became the Qin Dynasty, the first centralized empire of China.
History
Foundation
With the founding of the Zhou dynasty in 1046 BC,[1] King Wu of Zhou assigned the conquered lands as hereditary fiefs to his relatives and ministers. Territory in the area of modern-day Shandong was given to Jiang Ziya, his most important general from which the state of Qi arose.[2] Little information survives from this period. King Yi of Zhou (r. 865–858) attacked Qi and boiled Duke Ai of Qi to death. At the time of King Xuan of Zhou (r. 827–782) there was a succession struggle. During this time many of the native Dongyi peoples were absorbed into the Qi state.
Spring and Autumn period
In 706 BC, Qi was attacked by the Shan Rong. Qi rose to prominence under Duke Huan of Qi (685–643). He and his minister Guan Zhong strengthened the state by centralizing it. He annexed 35 neighboring states including Tan and brought others into submission. In 667 Duke Huan met with the rulers of Lu, Song, Chen and Zheng and was elected leader. Subsequently King Hui of Zhou made him the first Hegemon. He attacked Wei for supporting a rival of the Zhou king and intervened in the affairs of Lu. In 664 he protected Yan from the Rong. In 659 he protected Xing and in 660, Wei, from the Red Di. In 656 he blocked the northward expansion of Chu. After his death, his sons quarrelled and the hegemony passed to Jin.
In 632 Qi helped Jin defeat Chu at the Battle of Chengpu. In 589 Qi was defeated by Jin. In 579 the four great powers of Qin (west), Jin (center), Chu (south) and Qi (east) met to declare a truce and limit their military strength. In 546 a similar four-power conference recognized several smaller states as satellites of Qi, Jin and Qin.
Warring States period
Early in the period, Qi annexed a number of smaller states. Qi was one of the first states to patronize scholars. In 532, the Tian clan destroyed several rival families and came to dominate the state. In 485, the Tian killed the ducal heir and fought several rival clans. In 481, the Tian chief killed a puppet duke, most of the ruler's family and a number of rival chiefs. He took control of most of the state and left the Duke with only the capital of Linzi and the area around Mount Tai. In 386, the House of Tian replaced the House of Jiang as rulers of Qi. In 221, Qi was the last of the warring states to be conquered by Qin, thereby putting an end to the wars and uniting China under the Qin Dynasty.
Culture of Qi
Before Qin unified China, each state had its own customs and culture. According to the Yu Gong or Tribute of Yu, composed in the 4th or 5th century BC and included in the Book of Documents, there were nine distinct cultural regions of China, which are described in detail in this book. The work focuses on the travels of the titular sage, Yu the Great, throughout each of the regions. Other texts, predominantly military, also discussed these cultural variations.
One of these texts was The Book of Master Wu, written in response to a query by Marquis Wu of Wei on how to cope with the other states. Wu Qi, the author of the work, declared that the government and nature of the people were reflective of the terrain of the environment in which they inhabited. Of Qi, he said:
Although the Qi people are strong and the country is prosperous, the ruler and officials are arrogant and do not care about the people. The state's policies are not uniform and not strictly enforced. Salaries and wages are not fair. This causes disharmony and disunity. Although they are numerous, they are not strong. To defeat them, we should divide our army into three groups and have our left and right groups attack on the left and right wings of Qi's army. Once their battle formations are thrown into disarray, our central group will be in position to attack and victory will follow.— Wuzi, Master Wu Chen Song translation
While visiting Qi, Confucius was deeply impressed with perfection of performance of Shao music 韶 therein.[3]
During the Warring States period, Qi was famous for its capital's academy Jixia.
Rulers
House of Jiang
Title | Name | Period of reign (BC) | Relationship | Notes |
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Duke Tai 齊太公 | Lü Shang 吕尚 | 11th century | Enfeoffed by King Wu of Zhou, with capital at Yingqiu | |
Duke Ding 齊丁公 | Lü Ji 吕伋 | 10th century | 5th-generation descendant of Duke Tai | Traditionally believed to be son of Duke Tai |
Duke Yǐ 齊乙公 | De 得 | 10th century | Son of Duke Ding | |
Duke Gui 齊癸公 | Cimu 慈母 | c. 10th century | Son of Duke Yǐ | |
Duke Ai 齊哀公 | Buchen 不辰 | 9th century | Son of Duke Gui | Boiled to death by King Yi of Zhou |
Duke Hu 齊胡公 | Jing 靜 | 9th century | Son of Duke Gui | Moved capital to Bogu, killed by Duke Xian |
Duke Xian 齊獻公 | Shan 山 | 859?–851 | Son of Duke Gui | Moved capital back to Linzi |
Duke Wu 齊武公 | Shou 壽 | 850–825 | Son of Duke Xian | |
Duke Li 齊厲公 | Wuji 無忌 | 824–816 | Son of Duke Wu | Killed by supporters of Duke Hu's son. |
Duke Wen 齊文公 | Chi 赤 | 815–804 | Son of Duke Li | |
Duke Cheng 齊成公 | Yue 說 | 803–795 | Son of Duke Wen | |
Duke Zhuang I 齊前莊公 | Gou 購 | 794–731 | Son of Duke Cheng | Reigned for 64 years |
Duke Xi 齊僖公 | Lufu 祿甫 | 730–698 | Son of Duke Zhuang I | |
Duke Xiang 齊襄公 | Zhu'er 諸兒 | 697–686 | Son of Duke Xi | Committed incest with sister Wen Jiang, murdered her husband Duke Huan of Lu, conquered the state of Ji, murdered by cousin Wuzhi |
none | Wuzhi 無知 | 686 | Cousin of Duke Xiang, grandson of Duke Zhuang I | Killed by Yong Lin. |
Duke Huan 齊桓公 | Xiaobai 小白 | 685–643 | Younger brother of Duke Xiang | First of the Five Hegemons, when Qi reached zenith of its power. Starved to death by ministers |
none | Wukui or Wugui 無虧 or 無詭 | 643 | Son of Duke Huan | Killed by supporters of Duke Xiao |
Duke Xiao 齊孝公 | Zhao 昭 | 642–633 | Son of Duke Huan | Crown prince of Qi |
Duke Zhao 齊昭公 | Pan 潘 | 632–613 | Son of Duke Huan | His supporters murdered the son of Duke Xiao |
none | She 舍 | 613 | Son of Duke Zhao | Murdered by uncle Shangren |
Duke Yì 齊懿公 | Shangren 商人 | 612–609 | Uncle of She, son of Duke Huan | Killed by two ministers |
Duke Hui 齊惠公 | Yuan 元 | 608–599 | Son of Duke Huan | Defeated Long Di invaders |
Duke Qing 齊頃公 | Wuye 無野 | 598–582 | Son of Duke Hui | Defeated by Jin at the Battle of An |
Duke Ling 齊靈公 | Huan 環 | 581–554 | Son of Duke Qing | Annexed the State of Lai; defeated by Jin at the Battle of Pingyin, capital Linzi burned |
Duke Zhuang II 齊後莊公 | Guang 光 | 553–548 | Son of Duke Ling | Ascended throne by killing Prince Ya with the help of Cui Zhu; committed adultery with Cui's wife, killed by Cui |
Duke Jing 齊景公 | Chujiu 杵臼 | 547–490 | Half brother of Duke Zhuang II | Killed Cui Zhu. Had famous statesman Yan Ying as prime minister |
An Ruzi 安孺子 | Tu 荼 | 489 | Youngest son of Duke Jing | Deposed by Tian Qi and killed by Duke Dao. Also called Yan Ruzi |
Duke Dao 齊悼公 | Yangsheng 陽生 | 488–485 | Son of Duke Jing | Killed by a minister, possibly Tian Heng |
Duke Jian 齊簡公 | Ren 壬 | 484–481 | Son of Duke Dao | Killed by Tian Heng |
Duke Ping 齊平公 | Ao 驁 | 480–456 | Brother of Duke Jian | |
Duke Xuan 齊宣公 | Ji 積 | 455–405 | Son of Duke Ping | |
Duke Kang 齊康公 | Dai 貸 | 404–386 | Son of Duke Xuan | Deposed by Duke Tai of Tian Qi, died in 379 |
House of Tian
- Subject to the House of Jiang
Posthumous name | Personal name | Period as leader (BC) | Relationship | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tian Jingzhong 田敬仲 | Chen Wan 陳完 | Son of Duke Li of Chen | Exiled to Qi from the State of Chen | |
Tian Mengyi 田孟夷 | Tian Zhi 田穉 | Son of Chen Wan | ||
Tian Mengzhuang 田孟莊 | Tian Min 田湣 | Son of Mengyi | ||
Tian Wenzi 田文子 | Tian Xuwu 田須無 | Son of Mengzhuang | ||
Tian Huanzi 田桓子 | Tian Wuyu 田無宇 | Son of Wenzi | ||
Tian Wuzi 田武子 | Tian Kai 田開 | ?–516 | Son of Huanzi | |
Tian Xizi 田僖子 | Tian Qi 田乞 | Brother of Wuzi | Deposed An Ruzi | |
Tian Chengzi 田成子 | Tian Heng 田恆 | Son of Xizi | Killed Duke Jian, became de facto ruler of Qi | |
Tian Xiangzi 田襄子 | Tian Pan 田盤 | Son of Chengzi | ||
Tian Zhuangzi 田莊子 | Tian Bai 田白 | ?–411 | Son of Xiangzi | |
Tian Daozi 田悼子 | unknown | 410–405 | Son of Zhuangzi |
- As rulers of Qi
Title | Name | Period of reign (BC) | Relationship | Notes |
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Duke Tai 齊太公 | Tian He 田和 | 404–384 | Son of Tian Bai | Officially recognized as Qi ruler in 386 BC |
none | Tian Yan 田剡 | 383–375 | Son of Duke Tai | Killed by Duke Huan. |
Duke Huan 齊桓公 | Tian Wu 田午 | 374–357 | Brother of Tian Yan | |
King Wei 齊威王 | Tian Yinqi 田因齊 | 356–320 | Son of Duke Huan | Most powerful Qi ruler of the Warring States. |
King Xuan 齊宣王 | Tian Bijiang 田辟彊 | 319–300 | Son of King Wei | |
King Min 齊愍王 | Tian Di 田地 | 300–283 | Son of King Xuan | Temporarily declared himself "Emperor of the East". |
King Xiang 齊襄王 | Tian Fazhang 田法章 | 283–265 | Son of King Min | |
none | Tian Jian 田建 | 264–221 | Son of King Xiang | Qi conquered by Qin |
Qi in astronomy
Qi is represented by the star Chi Capricorni in the "Twelve States" asterism in the "Girl" lunar mansion in the "Black Turtle" symbol. Qi is also represented by the star 112 Herculis in the "Left Wall" asterism in the "Heavenly Market" enclosure.
See also
References
Further reading
- Michael Loewe, ed. (2006). The Cambridge history of ancient China: from the origins of civilization to 221 BC. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-521-47030-8.
- Glessner Creel, Herrlee (1979). The birth of China: a study of the formative period of Chinese civilization. New York: Ungar Publ. ISBN 0-8044-6093-0.
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Coordinates: 36°49′00″N 118°18′00″E / 36.8167°N 118.3000°E