'Zheng' (é„) was a
Zhou city-state in the middle of ancient
China, modern
Henan Province.
Foundation
Zheng was founded in
806 BC when
King Xuan of Zhou made his younger brother Ji You the Duke of Zheng with his capital at modern day
Huaxian,
Shaanxi Province. Ji You established what would be the last bastion of Western Zhou going on to
serve as prime minister to
King You of Zhou. Later, sensing that the Western Zhou dynasty was in decline, he moved his property, family members and merchants eastward. He was killed during a barbarian invasion and known posthumously as Duke Huan of Zheng. His son, Duke Wu, succeeded him.
Duke Wu of Zheng helped suppress the invasion for
King Ping of Zhou and reestablished the Zheng Dukedom. He annexed the states of Eastern Guo and Kuai and made modern day
Xinzheng,
Henan Province his capital.
Spring and Autumn Period
The state of Zheng was one of the strongest at the beginning of the
Spring and Autumn Period. Zheng was the first Zhou state to annex another state,
Xi, in
712 BC. Throughout the Spring and Autumn Period, Zheng was one of the wealthiest states, relying on its central location for inter-state
commerce and having the largest number of merchants of any state. Zheng often used its wealth to bribe itself out of difficult situations. Zheng was also home to many skilled statesmen, the most famous being
Zi Chan. By the later stages of the period, Zheng had no room to expand; due to its centralized location, Zheng was hemmed in on all sides by larger states.
During the later stages of the Spring and Autumn Period, Zheng frequently switched its diplomatic alliances. Zheng was the center of diplomatic contention between
Chu and
Qi, then later Chu and
Jin. Although Zheng was forced to become a bit player in the later stages of the Spring and Autumn Period, it was still quite strong, defeating a combined alliance of Jin,
Song,
Chen and Wei by itself in
607 BC.
Under the statesman Zi Chan, Zheng was the first state to clearly establish a
code of law in
543 BC. Zheng later declined until it was annexed by the state of
Han in
375 BC.
[1][2][3][4]
Sources, references, external links, quotes
1. An Outline History of China, , Shouyi, Bai, Foreign Language Press, 2002,
2. The Origins of Statecraft in China, , Herrlee G., Creel, , ,
3. The Multi-state System of Ancient China, , Richard Lewis, Walker, , ,
4. The Zheng Feudal Lords
★ Another Royal Tomb of 'King Zheng' Discovered in Henan
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