King Wu of Zhou

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox royalty

King Wu of Zhou (died Template:C. BC), personal name Ji Fa, was the founding king of the Chinese Zhou dynasty. The chronology of his reign is disputed but is generally thought to have begun around 1046 BC and ended with his death three years later.<ref>These dates are those of the People's Republic of China's official Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project, although they remain controversial.</ref>

King Wu was the second son of the Zhou elder Ji Chang (posthumously titled King Wen) and Tai Si. In most accounts, his older brother Bo Yikao was said to have predeceased his father, typically at the hands of King Zhou of Shang, the last king of the Shang dynasty. In the Book of Rites, however, it is assumed that his inheritance represented an older tradition among the Zhou of passing over the eldest son.<ref>Book of Rites, Tan Gong I, 1. Accessed 4 Nov 2012.</ref> (Fa's grandfather Jili had likewise inherited Zhou despite having two older brothers.)

Upon his succession, Fa worked with his father-in-law Jiang Ziya to accomplish an unfinished task: overthrowing the Shang dynasty. During the ninth year of his reign, Fa marched down the Yellow River to the Mengjin ford and met with more than 800 elders.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He constructed an ancestral tablet with his father's posthumous name as King Wen and placed it on a chariot in the middle of the host; considering the timing unpropitious, though, he did not yet attack Shang. Around 1046 BC by current estimates, King Wu took advantage of Shang disunity to launch an attack along with many neighboring elders. The Battle of Muye destroyed Shang's forces and King Zhou set his palace on fire, dying within.

King Wu followed his victory by moving his court from Feng to nearby Hao, leaving the older settlement to serve as a site for ancestral temples and gardens. He granted many 'feudal' states to his 16 younger brothers and to clans allied by marriage, but his death soon after ascension provoked several rebellions against his young heir King Cheng and the regent Ji Dan, even from three of his brothers.

A burial mound at Zhouling in Xianyang Prefecture, Shaanxi, was once thought to be King Wu's tomb. It was fitted with a headstone bearing Wu's name under the Qing dynasty. Modern archeology has since concluded that the tomb is not old enough to be from the Zhou dynasty and is more likely to be that of a Han dynasty royal. The true location of King Wu's tomb remains unknown but it is likely to be in the area of modern Xianyang and Xi'an.

King Wu is considered one of the great heroes of China, together with the mythical Yellow Emperor and the legendary Yu the Great.

Family

As depicted in the album Portraits of Famous Men Template:Circa 1900 CE, housed in the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Queens:

Sons:

Daughters:

See also

References

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