Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China

مرحبا Guest
اخر زيارك لك: 05-08-2024, 04:50 PM الصفحة الرئيسية

منتديات سودانيزاونلاين    مكتبة الفساد    ابحث    اخبار و بيانات    مواضيع توثيقية    منبر الشعبية    اراء حرة و مقالات    مدخل أرشيف اراء حرة و مقالات   
News and Press Releases    اتصل بنا    Articles and Views    English Forum    ناس الزقازيق   
مدخل أرشيف الربع الرابع للعام 2009م
نسخة قابلة للطباعة من الموضوع   ارسل الموضوع لصديق   اقرا المشاركات فى صورة مستقيمة « | »
اقرا احدث مداخلة فى هذا الموضوع »
10-15-2009, 09:50 PM

سيف اليزل برعي البدوي
<aسيف اليزل برعي البدوي
تاريخ التسجيل: 04-30-2009
مجموع المشاركات: 18425

للتواصل معنا

FaceBook
تويتر Twitter
YouTube

20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China (Re: سيف اليزل برعي البدوي)

    Birth
    A rich merchant in the state of Han, named Lü Buwei, met Master Yiren (公子異人). Lü Buwei's manipulation helped Yiren become King Zhuangxiang of Qin.[4] At the time, King Zhuangxiang of Qin was a prince of blood Qin, who took residence in the court of Zhao as a hostage to guarantee an armistice between the two states.[12]

    According to the Records of the Grand Historian, Zhao Zheng, first emperor, was born in 259 BCE as the eldest son of King Zhuangxiang of Qin.[2][13] King Zhaoxiang of Qin saw a concubine belonging to Lü Buwei, and she bore the first emperor.[13] At birth, he was given the personal name Zheng (政).[13] Because Zheng was born in Handan, capital of the enemy state of Zhao (趙), he had the name Zhao Zheng.[13] Zhao Zheng's ancestors are said to have come from Gansu province

    Birth controversy
    According to the Records of the Grand Historian, written by Sima Qian during the next dynasty and avowedly hostile to Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor was not the actual son of King Zhaoxiang of Qin. By the time Lü Buwei introduced the dancing girl Zhao Ji (趙姬, or the Concubine from Zhao) to the future King Zhuangxiang of Qin, she was allegedly Lü Buwei's concubine and already pregnant by him.[12] According to translated texts of Annals of Lü Buwei the woman bore the future emperor in Handan 259 BCE in the first month of the 48th year of King Zhaoxiang of Qin.[14] There was some inconsistency between the date of birth and the theory that Lü Buwei was the real father of the first emperor.[14] In the view of some scholars, the length of the pregnancy was irregular, lasting a full year, which is impossible, according to modern medicine.[14] The idea that the emperor was an illegitimate child added to the negative view of him for most of the past 2000 years.[5] However, today there is considerable skepticism among scholars about this claim by Sima Qian. Professors John Knoblock and Jeffrey Riegel, in their translation of Lü Buwei's Spring and Autumn Annals, call the story "patently false, meant both to libel Lü and to cast aspersions on the First Emperor."[

    King of the Qin state

    Teenage years
    In 246 BCE, when King Zhuangxiang died after a short reign of just three years, he was succeeded to the throne by his 13-year-old son.[16] At the time, Zhao Zheng was still young, so Lü Buwei acted as the regent prime minister of the Qin state, which was still waging war against the neighbouring six states.[5]

    Lao Ai's attempted coup
    As King Zheng grew older, Lü Buwei became fearful that the boy king would discover his liaison with his mother Zhao Ji (趙姬). He decided to distance himself and look for a replacement for the king. He found a man named Lao Ai (嫪毐), who had a reputation of having a large penis.[17] The Record of Grand historian said Lao Ai was disguised as a eunuch by plucking his beard. Later Lao Ai and queen Zhao Ji got along so well they secretly had two sons together.[17] Lao Ai then became ennobled as Marquis Lao Ai, and was showered with riches. Lü Buwei's plot was supposed to replace King Zheng with one of the hidden sons. But during a dinner party drunken Lao Ai was heard bragging about being the young king's step father.[17] In 238 BCE the king was traveling to the ancient capital of Yong (雍). Lao Ai seized the queen mother's Chinese seal and mobilized an army in an attempt to start a coup and rebel.[17]

    A price of 1 million copper coins was placed on Lao Ai's head if he was taken alive or half a million if dead.[17] Lao Ai's supporters were captured and beheaded; then Lao Ai was tied up and torn to two pieces by horse carriages, while his entire family was executed to the third degree.[17] The two hidden sons were also killed, while mother Zhao Ji was placed under house arrest until her death many years later. Lü Buwei drank a cup of poison wine and committed suicide in 235 BCE.[5][17] Ying Zheng then assumed full power as the King of the Qin state. Replacing Lü Buwei, Li Si was also now the new chancellor

    Jing Ke's assassination mission
    Main article: Jing Ke
    King Zheng and his troops continued to take over different states. The state of Yan was small, weak and frequently harassed by soldiers. It was no match for the Qin state.[18] So Crown Prince Dan of Yan plotted an assassination attempt to get rid of King Zheng, begging Jing Ke to go on the mission in 227 BCE.[4][18] Jing Ke was accompanied by Qin Wuyang in the plot. Each was supposed to present two gifts to King Zheng, a map of Dukang and the decapitated head of Fan Yuqi.[18]

    Qin Wuyang first tried to present the map case gift, but trembled in fear and moved no further towards the king. Jing Ke continued to advance toward the king, while explaining that his partner "has never set eyes on the Son of Heaven", which is why he is trembling. Jing Ke had to present both gifts by himself.[18] While unrolling the map, a dagger was revealed. The king drew back, stood on his feet, but struggled to draw the sword to defend himself.[18] At the time other palace officials were not allowed to carry weapons. Jing Ke pursued the king, attempting to stab him, but missed. King Zheng then drew out his sword and cut Jing Ke's thigh. Jing Ke then threw the dagger, but missed again. Suffering eight wounds from the king's sword, Jing Ke realised his attempt had failed. Both Jing Ke and Qin Wuyang would be killed afterwards.[18] The Yan state was conquered by the Qin state 5 years later.[

    Gao Jianli's assassination mission
    Main article: Gao Jianli
    Gao Jianli was a close friend of Jing Ke, who tried to avenge his death.[19] As a famous lute player, one day he was summoned by King Zheng to play the instrument. Someone in the palace who had known him in the past exclaimed, "This is Gao Jianli".[20] Unable to bring himself to kill such a skilled musician, the emperor ordered his eyes put out.[20] But the king allowed Gao Jianli to play in his presence.[20] He praised the playing and even allowed Gao Jianli to get closer. As part of the plot, the lute was fastened with a heavy piece of lead. He raised the lute and struck at the king. He missed and his assassination attempt failed. Gao Jianli was later executed

    First unification of China
    Main article: Qin Shi Huang's wars of unification

    Imperial tours of Qin Shi HuangIn 230 BCE, King Zheng unleashed the final campaigns of the Warring States Period, setting out to conquer the remaining independent kingdoms, one by one.

    The first state to fall was Han (韓; sometimes called Hann to distinguish it from the Han 漢 of Han dynasty), in 230 BCE. Then Qin took advantage of a natural disaster, the 229 BCE Zhao state earthquake, to invade and conquer Zhao where Qin Shi Huang had been born.[21][22] He now avenged his poor treatment as a child hostage there, seeking out and killing his enemies.

    Qin armies conquered the state of Zhao in 228 BCE, the northern country of Yan in 226 BCE, the small state of Wei in 225 BCE, and the largest state and greatest challenge, Chu, in 223 BCE.[23]

    In 222 BCE, the last remnants of Yan and its royal family were captured in Liaodong in the northeast. The only independent country left was now state of Qi, in the far east, what is now the Shandong peninsula. Terrified, the young king of Qi sent 300,000 men to defend his western borders. In 221 BCE, the Qin armies invaded from the north, captured the king, and annexed Qi.

    For the first time, all of China was unified under one powerful ruler. In that same year, King Zheng proclaimed himself the "First Emperor" (始皇帝).

    In the South, military expansion continued during his reign, with various regions being annexed to what is now Guangdong province and part of today's Vietnam.[22]
    First Emperor of the Qin dynasty

    Division and politics
    Main article: History of the administrative divisions of China
    In an attempt to avoid a recurrence of the political chaos of the Warring States Period, Qin Shi Huang and his prime minister Li Si completely abolished feudalism [22] and independent states (國)[24]; the conquered states were not allowed to be referred to as independent nations. The empire was then divided into 36 commanderies (郡), later more than 40 commanderies.[22] The whole of China was now divided into administrative units: first commanderies, then districts (縣), counties (鄉) and hundred-family units (里).[24] This system was different from the previous dynasties, which had loose alliances and federations.[25] People could no longer be identified by their native region or former feudal state, as when a person from Chu was called "Chu person" (楚人).[24][26] The administration was now based on merit instead of hereditary rights.[24]

    [edit] Economy
    Qin Shi Huang and Li Si unified China economically by standardizing the Chinese units of measurements such as weights and measures, the currency, the length of the axles of carts to facilitate transport on the road system.[25] The emperor also developed an extensive network of roads and canals connecting the provinces to improve trade between them.[25] The currency of the different states were also standardized to the Ban liang coin (半兩).[24] Perhaps most importantly, the Chinese script was unified. Under Li Si, the seal script of the state of Qin was standardized through removal of variant forms within the Qin script itself. This newly standardized script was then made official throughout all the conquered regions, thus doing away with all the regional scripts to form one language, one communication system for all of China.[24]

    [edit] Identification
    Qin Shi Huang also followed the school of the five elements, earth, wood, ####l, fire and water. It was believed that the royal house of the previous dynasty Zhou had ruled by the power of fire, which was the color red. Thus the new Qin dynasty must be ruled by the next element on the list, which is water, presented by the color black. Thus black became the colour for garments, flags, pennants.[27] Other associations include north as the cardinal direction, winter season and the number six.[28] Tallies and official hats were six inches long, carriages six feet wide, one pace (步) was 6 ft (1.8 m).[27]

    [edit] Zhang Liang's assassination attempt
    Main article: Zhang Liang (Western Han)
    In 230 BCE, the state of Qin had defeated the state of Han. A Han aristocrat named Zhang Liang swore revenge on the Qin emperor. He sold all his valuables and in 218 BCE, he hired a strongman assassin and built him a heavy ####l cone weighting 120 jin (roughly 160 lbs. or 97 kg.).[17] The two men hid among the bushes along the emperor's route over a mountain. At a signal, the muscular assassin hurled the cone at the first carriage and shattered it. However, the emperor was actually in the second carriage, as he was traveling with two identical carriages for this very reason. Thus the attempt failed.[29] Both men were able to escape in spite of a huge manhunt.[17]

    [edit] North: Great wall
    Main article: Great wall of China
    The Qin fought nomadic tribes to the north and northwest. The Xiongnu tribes were subdued, but the campaign was essentially inconclusive, and to prevent the Xiongnu from encroaching on the northern frontier any longer, the emperor ordered the construction of an immense defensive wall.[22][30] This wall, for whose construction hundreds of thousands of men were mobilized, and an unknown number died, is a precursor to the current Great Wall of China. Very little survives today of the great wall built by the first emperor as the original wall sections went to ruins centuries ago.[31]

    [edit] South: Ling canal
    Main article: Lingqu Canal
    A famous South China quotation was "In the North there is the Great wall, in the South there is the Ling canal" (北有長城、南有靈渠).[32] In 214 BCE the Emperor began the project of a major canal to transport supplies to the army.[33] The canal allows water transport between north and south China.[33] The 34 km canal links the Xiang River which flows into the Yangtze and the Li Jiang, which flows into the Pearl River.[33] The canal connected two of China's major waterways and aided Qin's expansion into the southwest.[33] The construction is considered one of the three great feats of Chinese engineering, the others being the Great Wall and the Sichuan Dujiangyan Irrigation System.[33]

    [edit] End of hundred schools of thought
    While the previous Warring States era was one of constant warfare, it was also considered the golden age of free thought.[34] Qin Shi Huang eliminated the Hundred Schools of Thought which incorporated Confucianism and other philosophies.[34][35] After the unification of China, with all other schools of thought banned, legalism became the endorsed ideology of the Qin dynasty.[24] Legalism was basically a system that required the people to follow the laws or be punished accordingly.

    [edit] Book burning period
    Main article: Burning of books and burying of scholars
    Beginning in 213 BCE, at the instigation of Li Si and to avoid scholars' comparisons of his reign with the past, Qin Shi Huang also ordered for most previously existing books to be burned, with the exception of books on astrology, agriculture, medicine, divination, and the history of the Qin state.[36] Owning the Book of Songs or the Classic of History was to be punished especially severely. According to the later Records of the Grand Historian, the following year Qin Shi Huang had some 460 scholars buried alive for owning the forbidden books.[36] .[37] The emperor's oldest son Fusu criticised him for this act.[38] The emperor's own library still had copies of the forbidden books, but most of these were destroyed later when Xiang Yu burned the palaces of Xianyang in 206 BCE.[39]

    [edit] Other achievements

    Portrait of Epang palaceAfter the unification, Qin Shi Huang moved out of Xianyang palace (咸陽宮), and began building the gigantic Epang palace (阿房宫) south of the Wei river, Epang is the most love concubine of Qin Shi Huang.[40] Other achievements such as the 12 bronze colossi were also made from the collected weapons.

    [edit] Death and aftermath
    [edit] Elixir of life
    Later in his life, Qin Shi Huang feared death and desperately sought the fabled elixir of life, which would supposedly allow him to live forever. He was obsessed with acquiring immortality and fell prey to many who offered him supposed elixirs.[41] He visited Zhifu Island three times in order to achieve immortality.[42] In one case he sent Xu Fu, a Zhifu islander, with ships carrying hundreds of young men and women in search of the mystical Penglai mountain.[29] They were sent to find Anqi Sheng, a 1,000-year-old magician whom Qin Shi Huang had supposedly met in his travels and who had invited him to seek him there.[43] These people never returned, because they knew that if they returned without the promised elixir, they would surely be executed. Legends claim that they reached Japan and colonized it.[41]

    [edit] Death
    In 211 BCE a large meteor is said to have fallen in Dongjun (東郡) in the lower reaches of the Yellow River. On it an unknown person inscribed the words "The First Emperor will die and his land will be divided."[44] When the emperor heard of this, he sent an imperial secretary to investigate this prophecy. No one would confess to the deed, so all the people living nearby were put to death. The stone was then burned and pulverized.[13]

    The emperor died during one of his tours of Eastern China, on September 10, 210 BCE (Julian Calendar) at the palace in Shaqiu prefecture (沙丘平台), about two months away by road from the capital Xianyang.[18][18][45][46] Reportedly, he died of swallowing mercury (poison) pills, made by his court scientists and doctors, which contained too much mercury.[47] Ironically, these pills were meant to make Qin Shi Huang immortal.[47]

    After the emperor's death Prime Minister Li Si, who accompanied him, was extremely worried that the news of his death could trigger a general uprising in the empire.[18] It would take two months for the government to reach the capital, and it would not be possible to stop the uprising. Li Si decided to hide the death of the emperor, and return to Xianyang.[18] Most of the imperial entourage accompanying the emperor was left uninformed of the emperor's death; only a younger son, Ying Huhai, who was traveling with his father; the eunuch Zhao Gao; Li Si; and five or six favorite eunuchs knew of the death.[18] Li Si also ordered that two carts containing rotten fish be carried immediately before and after the wagon of the emperor.[18] The idea behind this was to prevent people from noticing the foul smell emanating from the wagon of the emperor, where his body was starting to decompose severely as it was summertime.[18]

    [edit] Second emperor conspiracy
    Eventually, after about two months, Li Si and the imperial court reached Xianyang, where the news of the death of the emperor was announced.[18] Qin Shi Huang did not like to talk about his own death and he had never written a will. After his death, the eldest son Fusu would normally become the next emperor.[48]

    Li Si and the chief eunuch Zhao Gao conspired to kill Fusu because Fusu's favorite general was Meng Tian, whom they disliked[48] and feared; Meng Tian's brother, a senior minister, had once punished Zhao Gao.[49] They believed that if Fusu was enthroned, they would lose their power.[48] Li Si and Zhao Gao forged a letter from Qin Shi Huang saying that both Fusu and General Meng must commit suicide.[48] The plan worked, and the younger son Huhai became the Second Emperor, later known as Qin Er Shi or "Second Generation Qin."[18]

    Qin Er Shi, however, was not as capable as his father. Revolts quickly erupted. His reign was a time of extreme civil unrest, and everything that worked for the First Emperor crumbled away within a short period.[22] One of the immediate revolt attempts was the 209 BCE Chen Sheng Wu Guang Uprising led by Chen She and Wu Guang.[44]

    [edit] Legacy
    [edit] Mausoleum of the First emperor
    Main article: Terracotta Army

    Part of the Terracotta ArmyThe Chinese historian Sima Qian, writing a century after the First emperor's death, wrote that it took 700,000 men to construct it. The British historian John Man points out that this figure is larger than any city of the world at that time and calculates that the foundations could have been built by 16,000 men in two years.[50] While Sima Qian never mentioned the terracotta army, the statues were discovered by a team of well diggers in 1974.[51] The soldiers were created with a series of mix-and-match clay molds and then further individualized by the artists' hand. Han Purple was also used on some of the warriors.[52]

    [edit] Qin Shi Huang's tomb
    One of the first projects the young king accomplished while he was alive was the construction of his own tomb. In 215 BCE Qin Shi Huang ordered General Meng Tian with 300,000 men to begin construction.[37] Other sources suggested he ordered 720,000 non-paid laborers to build his tomb to specification.[16] Again, given John Man's observation regarding populations of the time (see paragraph above), these estimates must be regarded skeptically. The main tomb (located at 34°22′52.75″N 109°15′13.06″E / 34.3813194°N 109.2536278°E / 34.3813194; 109.2536278) containing the emperor has yet to be opened and there is evidence suggesting that it remains relatively intact.[53] Sima Qian's description of the tomb includes replicas of palaces and scenic towers, 'rare utensils and wonderful objects', 100 rivers made with mercury, representations of 'the heavenly bodies', and crossbows rigged to shoot anyone who tried to break in.[54] The tomb was built on Li Mountain which is only 30 kilometers away from Xi'an. Modern archaeologists have located the tomb, and have inserted probes deep into it. The probes revealed abnormally high quantities of mercury, some 100 times the naturally occurring rate, suggesting at least part of the legend can be trusted.[47] Secrets were maintained, as most of the workmen who built the tomb were killed

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qin_Shi_Huang
                  

العنوان الكاتب Date
Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:18 PM
  Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:19 PM
    Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:21 PM
      Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:21 PM
        Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:23 PM
          Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:24 PM
            Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:27 PM
              Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:30 PM
                Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:35 PM
                  Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:37 PM
                    Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:39 PM
                      Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:42 PM
                        Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:44 PM
                          Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:50 PM
                            Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 09:59 PM
                              Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 10:00 PM
                                Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-15-09, 10:03 PM
                                  Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-21-09, 11:20 PM
                                    Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-21-09, 11:37 PM
  Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-21-09, 11:43 PM
    Re: Emperor Qin Shi Huang -- First Emperor of China سيف اليزل برعي البدوي10-21-09, 11:48 PM


[رد على الموضوع] صفحة 1 „‰ 1:   <<  1  >>




احدث عناوين سودانيز اون لاين الان
اراء حرة و مقالات
Latest Posts in English Forum
Articles and Views
اخر المواضيع فى المنبر العام
News and Press Releases
اخبار و بيانات



فيس بوك تويتر انستقرام يوتيوب بنتيريست
الرسائل والمقالات و الآراء المنشورة في المنتدى بأسماء أصحابها أو بأسماء مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة
About Us
Contact Us
About Sudanese Online
اخبار و بيانات
اراء حرة و مقالات
صور سودانيزاونلاين
فيديوهات سودانيزاونلاين
ويكيبيديا سودانيز اون لاين
منتديات سودانيزاونلاين
News and Press Releases
Articles and Views
SudaneseOnline Images
Sudanese Online Videos
Sudanese Online Wikipedia
Sudanese Online Forums
If you're looking to submit News,Video,a Press Release or or Article please feel free to send it to [email protected]

© 2014 SudaneseOnline.com

Software Version 1.3.0 © 2N-com.de