Yue (state)
Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:More citations needed Template:Infobox Former Country Template:Infobox Chinese
Yue (Template:Zh), also known as Yuyue (Template:Lang or Template:Lang), was a state in ancient China which existed during the first millennium BC Template:Ndash the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods of China's Zhou dynasty Template:Ndash in the modern provinces of Zhejiang, Shanghai and Jiangsu. Its original capital was Kuaiji (modern Shaoxing); after its conquest of Wu, Yue relocated its court north to the city of Wu (modern-day Suzhou). Yue was conquered by Chu in 333 BC.
History
A specific kingdom, which had been known as the "Yue Guo" (Template:Lang) in modern Zhejiang, was not mentioned until it began a series of wars against its northern neighbor Wu during the late 6th century BC. According to the Records of the Grand Historian and Discourses of the States, the Yue are descended from Wuyu, the son of Shao Kang, the sixth king of the Xia dynasty.
With help from Wu's enemy Chu, Yue won after several decades of conflict. The famous Yue King Goujian destroyed and annexed Wu in 473 BC. Yue then inherited Wu's good relations with Jin, and the two became allies. In 441 BC, Jin and Yue invaded Qi, whereupon Qi erected the Long Wall to prevent Yue attacks from southern Shandong.
Yue reached their apex in 404 BC, when they, along with their ally of Jin, invaded Qi and Lu. Qi and Lu made peace with Yue, with Qi ceding territory and allowing Yue to march triumphantly through the Lu capital. The Marquis of Lu drove King Yi's carriage, with the Marquis of Qi accompanying him.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
During the reign of Wuqiang (Template:Lang), six generations after Goujian, Yue was partitioned by Chu and Qi in 333 BC.
Yue was famous for the quality of its metalworking, particularly its swords. Examples include the extremely well-preserved Swords of Goujian and Zhougou.
The Yue state appears to have been a largely indigenous political development in the lower Yangtze. This region corresponds with that of the old corded-ware Neolithic, and it continued to be one that shared a number of practices, such as tooth extraction, pile building, and cliff burial. Austronesian speakers also still lived in the region down to its conquest and sinification beginning about 240 BC.<ref name="Goodenough 1996">Template:Cite book</ref>
What set the Yue apart from other Sinitic states of the time was their possession of a navy.Template:Sfn Yue culture was distinct in its practice of naming boats and swords.Template:Sfn A Chinese text described the Yue as a people who used boats as their carriages and oars as their horses.Template:Sfn
Rulers of Yue family tree
Their ancestral name is rendered variously as either Si (Template:Lang) or Luo (Template:Zhi or Template:Zhi).<ref>Chinese Text Project. Wu–Yue Chunqiu. Template:Nowrap ["Yuèwàng Wúyú Wàizhuàn"]. Accessed 5 December 2013.Template:In lang</ref><ref>Theobald, Ulrich. China Knowledge. "Chinese History – Yue Template:Lang (Zhou period feudal state)". 2000. Accessed 5 December 2013.</ref>
Template:Yue state rulers family tree
Aftermath
After the fall of Yue, the ruling family moved south to what is now northern Fujian and set up the Minyue kingdom. This successor state lasted until around 150 BC, when it miscalculated an alliance with the Han dynasty.
Mingdi, Wujiang's second son, was appointed minister of Wucheng (present-day Huzhou's Wuxing District) by the king of Chu. He was titled Marquis of Ouyang Ting, from a pavilion on the south side of Ouyu Mountain. The first Qin dynasty emperor Qin Shi Huang abolished the title after his conquest of Chu in 223 BC, but descendants and subjects of its former rulers took up the surnames Ou, Ouyang, and Ouhou (Template:Zh) in remembrance.
When the religious leader Xu Chang launched a rebellion against the Han dynasty in 172 CE, he declared the state of Yue restored and appointed his father Xu Sheng as "King of Yue". The rebels were crushed in 174.Template:Sfnp
Astronomy
In Chinese astronomy, there are two stars named for Yue:
- Yue (along with Wu) is represented by the star Zeta Aquilae in the "Left Wall" of the Heavenly Market enclosure.<ref>"AEEA (Activities of Exhibition and Education in Astronomy) 天文教育資訊網 Template:Webarchive". 23 Jul 2006. Template:In lang</ref><ref>Allen, Richard. "Star Names – Their Lore and Meaning: Aquila".</ref>
- Yue is also represented by the star Psi Capricorni or 19 Capricorni<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in the "Twelve States" of the mansion of the Girl.<ref>Allen, Richard. "Star Names – Their Lore and Meaning: Capricornus".</ref>
Biology
The virus genus Yuyuevirus and the virus family Yueviridae are both named after the state.<ref name="2017.006M">Template:Cite web</ref>
People from Yue
- Yuenü, swordswoman and author of the earliest-known exposition on swordplay<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Xi Shi, a famous beauty of the ancient Yue Guo.
Language
Template:Further Possible languages spoken in the state of Yue may have been of Tai-Kadai and Austronesian origins. 126 Tai-Kadai cognates have been identified in Maqiao Wu dialect spoken in the suburbs of Shanghai out of more than a thousand lexical items surveyed.Template:Sfn According to the author, these cognates are likely traces of 'old Yue language' (Template:Zhi).Template:Sfn
See also
- Tai languages
- Tai-Kadai languages
- Austronesian languages
- Austro-Tai languages
- Tai peoples
- Austronesian peoples
- Austro-Tai peoples
- Baiyue
- Minyue
- Wu (state)
- Dong'ou Kingdom
- Âu Việt
- Lạc Việt
References
Sources
Further reading
- Zhengzhang Shangfang 1999. "An Interpretation of the Old Yue Language Written in Goujiàn's Wéijiă lìng" [句践"维甲"令中之古越语的解读]. In Minzu Yuwen 4, pp. 1–14.
- Zhengzhang Shangfang 1998. "Gu Yueyu" 古越語 [The old Yue language]. In Dong Chuping 董楚平 et al. Wu Yue wenhua zhi 吳越文化誌 [Record of the cultures of Wu and Yue]. Shanghai: Shanghai renmin chubanshe, 1998, vol. 1, pp. 253–281.
- Zhengzhang Shangfang 1990. "Some Kam-Tai Words in Place Names of the Ancient Wu and Yue States" [古吴越地名中的侗台语成份]. In Minzu Yuwen 6.
External links
- Eric Henry: The Submerged History of Yuè (Sino-Platonic Papers 176, May 2007)
- Pages with broken file links
- Yue (state)
- 334 BC
- 4th-century BC disestablishments in China
- History of Jiangsu
- History of Shanghai
- History of Zhejiang
- Shaoxing
- States and territories disestablished in the 4th century BC
- States of the Spring and Autumn period
- States of the Warring States period
- Ancient Chinese states