Eastern Wu ( ), also known
as Sun Wu ( ), was one of the Three Kingdoms competing for control of China
after the fall of the Han Dynasty in the Jiangnan (Yangtze Delta) region of China
.
During its
existence, its capital was largely at Jianye ( , modern Nanjing
), but at
times was at Wuchang ( , in modern Ezhou
, Hubei
).
History
During the
decline of the Han dynasty, the region of
Wu - a region in the south of the Yangtze River
surrounding Nanjing
- was under
the control of the warlord Sun Quan.
Sun Quan succeeded his brother
Sun Ce as the
lord over the Wu region paying nominal allegiance to
Emperor Xian of Han (who was, at that
point, under the control of
Cao Cao). Unlike
his competitors, he did not really have the ambition to be Emperor
of China. However, after
Cao Pi of
Cao Wei and
Liu Bei of the
Shu Han each declared themselves to be the
Emperor, Sun Quan decided to follow suit in 229, claiming to have
founded the
Wu Dynasty.
Sun Quan's long reign resulted in the stabilizing of the south. Wu
and Shu had a military alliance, to defeat Wei in the north.
Wu never
managed to gain territory north of the Yangtze river
, but Wei never managed to take territory south of
the river.
Eastern Wu was finally conquered by the first
Jin emperor,
Sima
Yan, in 280. Wu was the longest-lived of the three
kingdoms.
Legacy
Under the rule of Eastern Wu, southern China, regarded in early
history as a barbaric "jungle" developed into one of the
commercial, cultural, and political centers of China. Within five
centuries, during
the
Five Dynasties and Ten States, the development of Southern
China had surpassed that of the north. The achievements of Wu
marked the beginning of the cultural and political division between
Northern and Southern China that would repeatedly appear in Chinese
history well into modernity.
The
island of Taiwan may have been
first reached by the Chinese during the Three Kingdoms period.
Contacts
with the native population and the dispatch of officials to an
island named "Yizhou" (夷州) by the Eastern Wu navy might have been
to Taiwan, but the location of Yizhou is open to dispute; some
historians believe it was Taiwan, while others believe it was the
Ryūkyū
Islands
.
Notable figures
List of sovereigns
or Guiming Hou (歸命侯; gūi mìng hóu)
Eastern Wu 222-280
| Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號) |
Personal names |
Year(s) of Reigns |
Era Names (Nian
Hao 年號) and their range of years |
| Convention: use personal
name |
| Da Di (大帝 dà dì) |
Sun Quan (孫權 sūn quán) |
222-252 |
Huangwu (黃武 huáng wǔ) 222-229
Huanglong (黃龍 huáng lóng) 229-231
Jiahe (嘉禾 jiā hé) 232-238
Chiwu (赤烏 chì wū) 238-251
Taiyuan (太元 taì yuán) 251-252
Shenfeng (神鳳 shén2 fèng) 252 |
| Kuaiji Wang (會稽王 kuaì jī wáng) |
Sun Liang (孫亮 sūn liàng) |
252-258 |
Jianxing (建興 jiàn xīng) 252-253
Wufeng (五鳳 wǔ fèng) 254-256
Taiping (太平 taì píng) 256-258
|
| Jing Di (景帝 jǐng dì) |
Sun Xiu (孫休 sūn xiū) |
258-264 |
Yong'an (永安 yǒng ān) 258-264
|
Wucheng Hou (烏程侯 wū chéng hóu)
|
Sun Hao (孫皓 sūn haò) |
264-280 |
Yuanxing (元興 yuán xīng) 264-265
Ganlu (甘露 gān lù) 265-266
Baoding (寶鼎 baǒ dǐng) 266-269
Jianheng (建衡 jiàn héng) 269-271
Fenghuang (鳳凰 fèng huáng) 272-274
Tiance (天冊 tiān cè) 275-276
Tianxi (天璽 tiān xǐ) 276
Tianji (天紀 tiān jì) 277-280
|
See also