- Wei (state)
: "The following details the state of Wei of the
Warring States Period . Refer toKingdom of Wei for the state founded byCao Cao during theThree Kingdoms Period . Refer toRan Min for his state of Wei during theSixteen Kingdoms . Refer toWei (Spring and Autumn Period) for the State of Wei (卫), of identical pronunciation.The Wei (zh-cp|c=魏|p=Wèi) was a
state during theWarring States Period inChina . Its territory lay between the states of Qin and Qi and included modern areas inHenan ,Hebei andShanxi andShandong . After its capital was moved fromAnyi toDaliang (todayKaifeng ) during the reign ofKing Hui of Wei , Wei was also called the state of Liang.The state reached its height during the reigns of its first two rulers,
Marquess Wen of Wei andMarquess Wu of Wei .King Hui of Wei , the third ruler, concentrated in economic developments including irrigation projects at theYellow River . Nevertheless its slow decline began with King Hui. Wei's advancement in the east was checked several times in series of battles including theBattle of Maling in341 BC . In the west it lost theHexi region (a pastoral and strategic area on the west bank of the Yellow River at the border of todayShanxi andShaanxi province) to Qin, was remained continuously under invasions from Qin until the end.Military prowess of Qin broke the coalition forces of the states of Wei and Han at the
Battle of Yique in293 BC .The Wei surrendered to the Qin in
225 BC , after the Qin generalWang Fen flooded Daliang with water from theYellow River .Wei produced some fine generals and politicians, including Li Kui (李悝), a reformer and Prime Minister of Wei,
Yue Yang , ancestor ofYue Yi and conqueror of theState of Zhongshan , andPang Juan , who conquered many places but lost toTian Ji andSun Bin at Maling.List of Wei rulers
#Marquess Wen (文侯), personal name Si (斯) or Du (都), ruled
445 BC –396 BC
#Marquess Wu (武侯), personal name Ji (擊), son of previous, ruled396 BC –370 BC
#King Hui (惠王), personal name Ying (罃), son of previous, ruled370 BC –319 BC
#King Xiang (襄王), personal name Si (嗣) or He (赫), son of previous, ruled319 BC –296 BC
#King Zhao (昭王), personal name Chi (遫), son of previous, ruled296 BC –277 BC
#King Anxi (安釐王),personal name Yu (圉), son of previous, ruled277 BC –243 BC
#King Jingmin (景湣王), personal name Zeng (增) or Wu (午), son of previous, ruled243 BC –228 BC
#King Jia, ( 王假), personal name Jia (假), son of previous, ruled228 BC –225 BC According to the "
Records of the Grand Historian " (史記) written bySima Qian in the1st century BC , the list of rulers is slightly different: King Hui died in335 BC and was succeeded by his son King Xiang in334 BC . King Xiang died in319 BC and was succeeded by his son King Ai (哀王), who died in296 BC and was succeeded by his son King Zhao. However, the majority of scholars and commentators think that King Ai, whose personal name is not recorded, never existed. It seems that Sima Qian assigned the second part of the reign of King Hui (starting in334 BC , on which date the hitherto Marquess Hui probably proclaimed himself King) to his son King Xiang, and added King Ai to fill in the gap between319 BC and296 BC . On the other hand, a minority of scholars believe King Ai indeed existed.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.