King Wu of Chu (Chinese: 楚武王, died 690 BC) was the first king of the State of Chu during the Spring and Autumn period of ancient China. He was the second son of Xiao'ao, and brother of former ruler Fenmao whom he is rumored to have murdered in 740 BC in order to usurp the throne.[A] He was also the first ruler among Zhou's vassal states to style himself "king"; Chu was one of a few states where local rulers declared themselves kings during the Spring and Autumn period. Other states include Wu and Yue.

Xiong Che
楚武王
King of Chu
Reign704–690 BC
PredecessorNew title
SuccessorKing Wen
Viscount of Chu
Reign740–704 BC
PredecessorFenmao
SuccessorCrowned as the king
Names
Posthumous name
King Wu (武王)

Life

edit

King Wu married a daughter of the ruler of Deng called Deng Man (邓曼) and installed Dou Bobi (鬬伯比), son of Ruo'ao as Prime Minister and his son Qu Xia (屈瑕)[B] as Mo'ao[C].

With the power of Chu growing by the day, King Wu became dissatisfied with the title of Master () and sought to better himself. In the summer of the thirty-seventh year of his reign, 704 BCE, at the time of King Huan of Zhou, he invited the leaders of the other vassal states to a meeting at Shenlu (沈鹿)[D]. The states of Ba, Pu (), Deng, Jiao (绞/絞), Luo (罗/羅), Zhen (轸/軫), Shen, Er (贰/貳), Yun () and Jiang () all sent representatives with only the States of Huang and Sui (随/隨) not in attendance. King Wu's minister Wei Zhang (蒍章) was dispatched to Huang to criticize their non-attendance whilst the King and Qu Xia led an army to attack the State of Sui.[1] Sui was overthrown at the Battle of Suqi (速杞之战). The state's leader fled whilst Chu Minister, Dou Dan (鬬丹) captured the Marquess of Sui's chariot along with the chariot division military commander. Thereafter, Sui did not act rashly again. Xiong Che declared himself “King”, marking Chu's formal independence from the Zhou Dynasty. Subsequent rulers of Chu would all style themselves “King”, heralding the start of the vassal kingdoms’ usurpation of Zhou supremacy and the decline of the House of Zhou.

In 700 BCE, the forty-first year of his reign, the Chu army defeated the State of Jiao which subsequently became a vassal of Chu. The following year, King Wu sent his son Qu Xia to attack the State of Luo. Qu Xiao underestimated the enemy and became trapped between Lu Nomads (卢戎) and the Luo army on the borders of the state. Qu Xia suffered a major defeat and fled with his remaining troops to Huangyu (荒谷)[E] where he hanged himself. King Wu took responsibility for the defeat and pardoned all remaining soldiers who had taken part in the battle, although he already ordered the amputation of their right feet. In 690 BCE, King Wu led his troops on a punitive expedition into the State of Sui. After crossing the Han River and arriving on the eastern bank, he was suddenly taken ill. He sat down under a tree and died not long afterwards. The Chu Prime Minister Dou Qi (鬬祁), son of Dou Dan did not hold a funeral, but instead led the Chu army on the advance westward as originally planned. When the Chu army arrived at the capital of the State of Sui, its rulers capitulated and swore allegiance to Chu. The Chu army withdrew across the Han River where they held a funeral for the late king. Thereafter, his son Xiong Zi ascended the throne as King Wen of Chu.

Issue

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Durrant, Stephen; Li, Wai-yee; Schaberg, David, eds. (2016). "Lord Huan 8 (704 BCE)". Zuo Tradition. Zuozhuan. 左傳: Commentary on the "Spring and Autumn Annals". University of Washington Press. pp. 103–106. ISBN 978-0-295-999159.

Notes

edit
  1. ^
    Some sources state that King Wu murdered Xiong Xuan’s son, not his actual brother.
  2. ^
    An ancestor of noted Warring States period poet Qu Yuan.
  3. ^
    A senior official in the Chu state government.
  4. ^
    East of modern day Zhongxiang City, Hubei Province.
  5. ^
    On the border of modern day Jiangling County, Hubei Province
  6. ^
    later changed to Tōng (通) in historical records due to naming taboo with Emperor Wu of Han
King Wu of Chu
 Died: 591 BC
Regnal titles
Preceded byas Viscount of Chu King of Chu
740–690 BC
Succeeded by