Qin Dynasty
The
Qin Dynasty, or
Ch'in Dynasty (
Wade-Giles) (秦朝
221 BC -
206/
207 BC) preceded by the
Zhou Dynasty and followed by the
Han Dynasty in
China.
Qin is sometimes spelt as
Chin, and is a possible origin of the word "China". (See also:
China in world languages)
Much of what came to constitute
China Proper was unified for the first time in 221 B.C. In that year the western frontier
state of Qin, the most aggressive of the Warring States, subjugated the last of its rival states, putting an end to the
Warring States Period.
The King of Qin, Ying Zheng, proclaimed himself
Qin Shi Huangdi (the First Emperor), a formulation of titles previously reserved for deities and the
mythological sage-emperors. He wanted his successors to rule China forever with the title "Emperor of China II", "Emperor of China III", etc.
In consolidating power, the Qin Shi Huangdi imposed the State of Qin's centralized, nonhereditary bureaucratic system on his new empire in place of the Zhou's
feudalistic one. The Qin Empire relied on the philosophy of
legalism (with skilful advisors like Han Fei and
Li Si). Centralization, achieved by ruthless methods, was focused on standardizing legal codes and bureaucratic procedures, the forms of writing and coinage, and the pattern of thought and scholarship.
Characterss from the former state of Qin became the standard for the entire empire. To silence criticism of imperial rule, the emperor banished or put to death many dissenting
Confucian scholars and confiscated and burned their books.
Qin aggrandizement was aided by frequent military expeditions pushing forward the frontiers in the north and south. To fend off barbarian intrusion (mainly against the
Xiongnu in the north), the fortification walls built by the various warring states were connected to make a 5,000- kilometer-long
Great Wall of China. A number of public works, including canals and bridges, projects were also undertaken to consolidate and strengthen imperial rule. A lavish tomb for the emperor, complete with a
Terracotta Army was built near the capital Xianyang, a city half an hour from modern
Xi'an. These activities required enormous levies of manpower and resources, not to mention repressive measures.
Endless labor in the later years of Ying Zheng's reign started to provoke widespread discontent. However, the emperor was still barely able to maintain stability by his tight grip on every aspect of lives of the Chinese.
During a trip with his beloved second son
Ying Huhai in
210 BC, Ying Zheng died suddenly at Shaqiu prefecture. Ying Huhai, under the advice of two high officials - the Imperial Secretariat
Li Si and the chief
eunuch Zhao Gao - forged the altered Emperor's will. The faked decree ordered Ying Zheng's first son, the heir
Ying Fu Su, to commit suicide, and renamed Ying Huhai as the next emperor, and stripped the command of troops from Marshal Meng Tian - a faithful supporter of Ying Fu Su - and killed Meng's family also. Zhao Gao step by step seized the power of Ying Huhai, effectively made him a puppet emperor.

Within the first 3 months after Ying Zheng's death, widespread revolts by peasants, prisoners, soldiers and descendants of the nobles of the Six
Warring States sprang up all over China. Chen Sheng and Wu Guang, two in a group of about 900 soldiers assigned to defend against the Xiongnu, were the leaders of the first rebellion.
In
207 BC, Zhao Gao forced Ying Huhai to commit suicide and replaced him by the murdered heir's son,
Ying Ziying. Note that the title of Ying Ziying was "king of Qin" to reflect the fact that Qin no longer controlled the whole of China. The
Chu-Han contention ensued. Ying Ziying soon killed Zhao Gao and surrendered to
Liu Bang in
206 BC. The Qin Dynasty collapsed, three years after the death of Ying Zheng, and less than twenty years after it was founded.
Although the Qin Dynasty was short-lived, its legalist rule had a deep impact on later dynasties in China. The imperial system initiated during the Qin dynasty set a pattern that was developed over the next two millennia.
Sovereigns of Qin Dynasty
Note: Qin Zhao Xiang Wang (秦昭襄王 qin2 zhao1 xiang1 wang2) had already been ruling Qin for 51 years when Qin annihilated the Zhou Dynasty; however the other six warring states were still independent regimes. Historiographers thus used the next year (the 52nd year of Qin Zhao Shang Wang) as the official continuation from
Zhou Dynasty. Qin Shi Huangdi was the first Chinese sovereign proclaimed himself "Emperor".
\n| Posthumous names / title | \nChinese family names and given namess | \nPeriod of Reigns | \n
\n| Convention: "Qin" + posthumous name | \n
\n| Zhaoxiang (昭襄 Zhao1xiang1) | \nYing Ze (嬴則 ying2 ze2 or Ying Ji|嬴稷 ying2 ji4) | \n255 BC-250 BC | \n
\n| Xiaowen (孝文 Xiao4wen2) | \nYing Zhu (嬴柱 ying2 zhu4) | \n250 BC | \n
\n| Zhuangxiang (莊襄 Zhuang1xiang1) | \nYing Zi Chu (嬴子楚 ying2 zi5 chu3) | \n249 BC-247 BC | \n
\n| Shi Huangdi (始皇帝 Shi3 Huang2di4) | \nYing Zheng (嬴政 ying2 zheng4) | \n246 BC-210 BC | \n
\n| Er Shi (二世 Er4shi4) | \nYing Hu Hai (嬴胡亥 ying2 hu2 hai4) | \n209 BC-207 BC | \n
\n| Zi Ying was often referred using personal name or Qin Wang Zi Ying (秦王子嬰 qin2 wang2 zi5 ying1) | \n
\n| Did not exist | \nYing Ziying (嬴子嬰 ying2 zi5 ying1) | \n207 BC | \n
During the Qin Dynasty, since Shi Huangdi ("First Emperor"), there has been no posthumous name. The title of
Shi Huangdi and
Er Shi ("Second Generation") were used within the rulers' own lifetimes.
Related Articles
\n*Chinese sovereign\n*
State of Qin