Liu Bang (刘邦)
Chinese. Name of a
commoner and local sheriff in his birthplace of the Han Kingdom,
who after the death of China's first Emperor
Qin Shi Huang Ti,
emerged as the new leader of a unified China and became the
first ruler
of the Han Dynasty
under the name Emperor Han Gao
Zu (高祖). When after the demise of Shi Huang Ti, the third and
last Qin ruler, Zi Ying (子嬰), in 206 BC unconditionally
surrendered to rebel forces, the Qin state began to fall apart
into Eighteen Kingdoms that once again began to war among
themselves and the chaos from the time before unification
returned. When Liu Bang was ordered to bring a group of slaves
to the construction site of Shi Huang Ti's tomb, some managed to
escape and fearing punishment he decided to also release the
other slaves and became a rebel fighting against the Qin Empire
instead, with most of the slave joining him out of gratefulness
and soon entered the service of a rebel king, fighting what
remained of the Qin Empire with Liu Bang showing extraordinary
skill on the battlefield, eventually capturing the Qin city of
Xianyang for the rebellion and was crowned its king as a reward.
The civil wars raged on, full of complicated alliances and
rivalries, until finally only two major contending powers
remained, i.e. Liu Bang and his rival, rebel leader Xiang Yu
(项羽), a nobleman of Chu State. Some of the other kingdoms also
waged war among themselves but these were largely insignificant
compared to the main conflict between Chu and Han, known as the
Chu–Han War. These two warlords by 203 BC divided all the lands
of China between them, east and west along the great water
course of the Hong Canal, in a treaty known as the Treaty of the
Hong Canal. Shortly after, however, as Xiang Yu was retreating
eastwards, Liu Bang renounced the treaty and led his forces to
attack Western Chu. The war ended in 202 BC with a total Han
victory at the Battle of Gaixia, where Xiang Yu fled to Wujiang
and committed suicide. Liu Bang subsequently proclaimed himself
Emperor and established the Han Dynasty as the ruling dynasty of
China. In China, to this day, the two sides of a
xiang qi
chess board
are referred to as Chu and Han, after the Chu–Han Contention.
回
|