Duke Huan of Qin
Duke Huan of Qin 秦桓公 | |||||||||
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Ruler of Qin | |||||||||
Reign | 603–577 BC | ||||||||
Predecessor | Duke Gong of Qin | ||||||||
Successor | Duke Jing of Qin | ||||||||
Died | 577 BC | ||||||||
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House | Ying | ||||||||
Dynasty | Qin | ||||||||
Father | Duke Gong of Qin |
Duke Huan of Qin (Chinese: 秦桓公; pinyin: Qín Huán Gōng, died 577 BC), personal name Ying Rong, was from 603 to 577 BC the ruler of the Qin state. Duke Huan succeeded his father Duke Gong, who died in 604 BC, as ruler of Qin.[1][2]
In 578 BC, Qin suffered a major defeat at the hand of the Jin state. Duke Li of Jin accused Qin of treachery and personally led an alliance of eight states (Jin, Qi, Song, Wey, Zheng, Cao, Zhu, and Teng) to attack Qin. The two sides fought at Masui (in present-day Jingyang County, Shaanxi). Qin was resoundingly defeated and two of its generals were captured, although Duke Xuan of Cao, ruler of Jin's ally Cao, was also killed in the battle.[3]
Duke Huan died after a reign of 27 years. He was succeeded by his son, Duke Jing.[1][2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Sima Qian. 秦本纪 [Annals of Qin]. Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). guoxue.com. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
- ^ a b Han, Zhaoqi (2010). "Annals of Qin". Annotated Shiji (in Chinese). Zhonghua Book Company. pp. 400–403. ISBN 978-7-101-07272-3.
- ^ Zuo Qiuming (translated by James Legge). "Book VIII. Duke Cheng". Zuo Zhuan (in Chinese and English). University of Virginia. Retrieved 23 April 2012. Chapter XIII.