History of the Jin dynasty (266–420)
The Jin Dynasty (265-420) was one of China's most crucial dynasties. Following the devastation of the Three Kingdoms period, the Jin reunified China[1] and fostered a brief period of prosperity between 280 and 304 CE. However, during this period many social problems developed as well, the most pressing of which was the migration of barbarian tribes into Jin territory, to the point where they outnumbered Han Chinese in some regions.
Eventually, these tribes began the Wu Hu uprising, during which they took control of much of North China,[2] China's heartland at that time, and reduced Jin control to the territory south of the Huai river. This ended the prosperity of the early Jin. The Jin Dynasty was afterwards known as the Eastern Jin.
The Eastern Jin's government was dominated to a large extent by powerful generals such as Wang Bo and Huan Wen. These generals often launched expeditions to recover northern China from Wu Hu rule. However, internal division in the government and military, coupled with the weakness of the Southern economy, meant that these expeditions were mostly unsuccessful. By 383 CE, Jin China was threatened by the Former Qin Empire, which had reunified all of North China. Instead of reconquering the North, Jin was fighting for its very survival.
However, in the Battle of Fei River, Jin forces prevailed over the much larger Qin army, causing the collapse of Former Qin in the North.[3] Taking advantage of this, Jin forces under first Xie An and then Liu Yu launched a series of expeditions that retook much of China's territory south of the Yellow River, the traditional heartland. Eventually, though, the Jin were overthrown by Liu Yu in 420, ending the dynasty.
Rise of the Jin
Foundation
The Jin dynasty was founded by the Sima family, a prominent family within Cao Wei, the most powerful of China's Three Kingdoms. They effectively controlled Cao Wei's military forces after 250, becoming the real rulers of the state. In 265 CE, the last Wei emperor abdicated and gave up his throne to Sima Yan, who became the first Jin emperor.[4]
Conquest of Wu
As Emperor Wu of Jin, Sima Yan immediately focused on conquering the last of the Three Kingdoms, Wu, which controlled southeastern China. In 280 CE, 200,000 Jin troops in six columns, travelling by river and land, invaded Wu from both Sichuan and the North. They quickly broke through all resistance, including an attempt by Wu's chancellor Zhang Di to stop them with 30,000 troops. Very soon, Jin forces were besieging the Wu capital, Nanjing, which had only 20,000 defenders. Realizing he was doomed, the Wu ruler surrendered to Jin, and China was reunified.[5]
Prosperity of the Taikang Era
During the rule of Emperor Wu, China entered an era of prosperity. The Jin encouraged recovery by lowering taxes and subsidizing the construction of dikes and other works to benefit agriculture. The reunification of China also spurred on trade to help stimulate the economy.[6]
This prosperity was reflected in the growing luxury of the emperor. One official reportedly entertained Emperor Wu with pork that had been fed on human milk, while another spent over 20,000 strings of cash each day on food alone. This decadence was criticized by other Jin officials, who also worried about increasing barbarian migration into China.[7]
Fall of the Western Jin
War of the Eight Princes
Emperor Wu believed that Wei's fall had been caused by the royal family losing power and support. To prevent this in his own dynasty, he appointed many of his brothers and sons as "kings" of individual provinces, in effect creating a series of powerful regional governments alongside the central government.
Consequently, following Emperor Wu's death, control of his weak heir Emperor Hui of Jin was fought over by the regional princes in the devastating War of the Eight Princes (301-305 CE), severely weakening the Jin Dynasty.[8]
Wu Hu uprising
Following the War of the Eight Princes, the barbarian tribes in north China, under the collective Wu Hu, saw an opportunity to take advantage of the chaos in China. Their forces, under Liu Yuan, revolted against the Jin Dynasty in 304 CE. Although Jin forces fought hard to contain Wu Hu uprising, they suffered a major defeat in 310 CE that wiped out an army of over 100,000 troops, and afterwards could not hold north China. In 311 CE, the Wu Hu sacked the Jin capital, Luoyang, killing over 30,000 people, and Jin's secondary capital, Chang'an, was also captured in 316 CE.[9]
The Middle Jin (316-383)
Internal crisis
The remaining followers of the Jin Dynasty retreated south and formed the Eastern Jin Dynasty, whose control was limited to South China. Throughout this period, the Jin court was severely weakened, allowing the Eastern Jin to be dominated by strong generals such as Wang Bo and Huan Wen.
Huan Wen's expeditions
Huan Wen, who effectively controlled the Jin state from 346 CE to 373 CE, launched a series of expeditions against the Wu Hu, in an attempt to strengthen both the Jin and his own prestige. However, most of these expeditions failed due to lack of supplies and the Jin court's suspicion of Huan Wen.[10]
The Late Jin (383-420)
Battle of Fei River
By 376 CE, the North had been reunified under the state of Former Qin, putting Jin in grave danger. In 383 CE, Fu Jian, ruler of Former Qin, invaded Jin with 300,000 troops, against which the Jin could only deploy 80,000 troops. However, the Chinese troops were well-trained and equipped, while the Qin army was made up mostly of conscripts. In the Battle of Fei River, the Qin army was routed by the Jin army.[11]
After this victory, Chancellor Xie An, taking advantage of Former Qin's collapse, reclaimed much of the territory north of the Huai River for Jin. However, a rebellion by Huan Wen's son Huan Xun distracted the Jin, who were unable to defeat it until the rise of Liu Yu.[12]
Liu Yu's expeditions
Usually regarded as the best general of the Southern and Northern dynasties, Liu Yu defeated and killed Huan Xun in 406 CE. He then launched a series of expeditions against Former Qin, Xia, Southern Yan, and Northern Wei, all of which succeeded with the exception of Xia. These victories allowed the Chinese to retake the heartland of China and fixed their northern border at the Yellow River. Following these victories, Liu Yu's prestige rose, to the point where he usurped the Jin throne in 420 CE, ending the dynasty. Under the rule of him and his son, China would enter a brief golden age, lasting until the Xianbei again conquered north China during the rule of Emperor Ming of Liu Song.[13]
References
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 365
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 384
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 419
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 361
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 364.
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 365
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 366
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 371-379
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 383-384
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 390
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 419
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 428
- ^ Li and Zheng, pg 428-432
Sources
- Book of Jin
- Li, Bo; Zheng Yin (Chinese) (2001) 5000 years of Chinese history, Inner Mongolian People's publishing corp, ISBN 7-204-04420-7,