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Encyclopedia > King Mu of Zhou

King Mo of Zhou (ch 周穆王 zhōu m wng) or King Mo of Chou was the fifth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.


Personal information

family name Ji (姬 jī) in Chinese
given name Man (滿 măn) in Chinese
era name none
father King Zhao of Zhou
mother unknown
wife unknown
children King Gong of Zhou and King Xiao of Zhou
approximate duration of reign 1001 BC-946 BC
tomb unknown
temple name unknown
courtesy name unknown
posthumous name Mo 穆 (pinyin m wng), literary meaning: "reverend"
Preceded by:
King Zhao of Zhou
Zhou Dynasty Succeeded by:
King Gong of Zhou

  Results from FactBites:
 
Chinese History - Zhou Dynasty 周 event history (www.chinaknowledge.de) (6248 words)
King Zhou (Zhow) burned himself, and his kingdom was conquered by the armies of Zhou and their allies from the west, among them many Non-Chinese tribes like Shu 蜀, Qiang 羌 (Tibetian), and Pu 濮.
King Xuanwang rewarded some important chieftains that helped hims against military pressure as feudal lords, the most important among these new fiefs were Qin 秦 in the west and Xie 謝 and Zheng 鄭 in the east.
King Huaiwang was allured to visit the court of Qin, was taken as hostage and died far from his homelands as prisoner in the west.
Zhou Dynasty -- Political, Social, Cultural, Historical Analysis Of China -- Research Into Origins Of Huns, Uygurs, ... (13765 words)
King Xiangwang conferred onto Jinn Lord the title of Count and the land of Yangfan or 'he nei' (pronounced as He-rui in ancient Chinese to mean the winding section of the Yellow River).
One of the sons of King Shaokang of Xia Dynasty was permanently assigned to the Kuaiji land to guard the tomb, and the later Yue Principality was said to have descended from this lineage.
Zhou King Pingwang moved eastward to Luoyi in 770 BC under the escort of Qin lord, and promised to Qin the land of Feng and Qishan should Qin defeat Quanrong and recover the territories.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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