(Redirected from State of Yue)
'Yue' () (also known as Zhao in other sources) was a state in
China which existed during the
Spring and Autumn Period and the
Warring States Period, in modern
Zhejiang. During the Springs and Autumns, its capital was in Guiji (会稽), near the modern city of Shaoxing. After the conquest of
Wu, the kings of Yue moved their capital north, to Wu (modern Suzhou).
According to
Sima Qian, its rulers claimed to be descended from
Yu the Great, and the annotation to the
Guo Yu mention that their surname was Mi (the same as the kings of
Chu).
Ancient Chinese texts do not mention Yue until the wars which opposed it to its northern neighbour, the state of
Wu, in the late sixth century BC. After several decades of conflict,
King Goujian of Yue managed to destroy and annex
Wu in
473 BC, and Yue became one of the powerful states in the early
Warring States Period.
In
334 BC, the State of Yue, under the rule of Wu Jiang, the sixth generation descendant of Goujian, was eventually defeated and annexed by
Chu. The second son of Wu Jiang, Ming Di, was appointed by the ruler of Chu to administer a place called Wu Cheng (present day Wu Xing county of
Zhejiang province), which was situated south of Ou Yang Ting (pavilion), so named because it was built on the south and yang (sunny) side of the Ou Yu Mountain, and hence was given the title of Ou Yang Ting Hou (the equivalent of Marquis). After Chu was subjugated by Qin during the period of the Warring States in
223 BC, the title was abolished by the Qin Emperor Ying Zheng. The descendants took up the surname
Ou,
Ouyang or Ou Hou (since disappeared) in remembrance of his official title.
After the fall of Yue, the ruling family moved to
Fujian and set up the
Minyue kingdom, which did not fall until ~150 BCE by the
Han Dynasty. Minyue cities, neatly constructed from stone, were excavated in Fujian and tombs showing the Yue burial customs were recently discovered.
The state was famous for the quality of its metalworking, in particular its swords. Examples include the extremely-well preserved
Sword of Gou Jian and sword of King Zhou Gou (州勾). The beauty
Xi Shi was a native of the state.
The leaders of Yue and Wu were kings, not dukes because they were considered "barbarian" states and did not petition the nominal Zhou court for peerage.
See also
★
Yue (peoples)
External links
★ Eric Henry:
The Submerged History of Yuè (''Sino-Platonic Papers'' 176, May 2007;
PDF)