King Xi of Zhou
| King Xi of Zhou 周僖王 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King of the Zhou dynasty | |||||||||
| Reign | 681–677 BC | ||||||||
| Predecessor | King Zhuang of Zhou | ||||||||
| Successor | King Hui of Zhou | ||||||||
| Died | 677 BC | ||||||||
| Issue | King Hui of Zhou Duke Wen of Wangshu | ||||||||
| |||||||||
| House | Ji | ||||||||
| Dynasty | Zhou (Eastern Zhou) | ||||||||
| Father | King Zhuang of Zhou | ||||||||
King Xi of Zhou (died 677 BC) (Chinese: 周僖王; pinyin: Zhōu Xī Wáng), personal name Ji Huqi, was a king of the Chinese Zhou dynasty.[1]
He was the successor to his father King Zhuang,[2] and was in turn succeeded by his son, King Hui.
By the time of King Xi's reign, China proper had dissolved into a multitude of Warring States, only nominally subject to the Eastern Zhou king, who was no longer even the most powerful figure (that was Duke Huan of the Qi state).[3]
Family
Sons:
- Prince Lang (王子閬; d. 652 BC), ruled as King Hui of Zhou from 676 to 652 BC
- Prince Hu (王子虎; d. 624 BC), ruled as Duke Wen of Wangshu (王叔文公) until 624 BC
See also
Notes
- ^ Michael Loewe and Edward Shaughnessy, ed. (1999), The Cambridge History of Ancient China, Cambridge University Press
- ^ Trình Doãn Thắng, Ngô Trâu Cương, Thái Thành (1998), Cố sự Quỳnh Lâm, NXB Thanh Hoá
- ^ ZHOU GENEALOGY (Warring States period)