The Sixteen Kingdoms (simplified Chinese: 十六国; traditional Chinese: 十六國; pinyin: Shíliù Guó), less commonly the Sixteen States, was a period in Chinese history from AD 304 to 439 when the political order of the Jin dynasty (266–420) in northern China fragmented into a series of short-lived dynastic states. Most of these states were founded by the "Five Barbarians" – Xiongnu, Xianbei, Di, Jie, Qiang – non-Han peoples from northern and western China who launched the rebellions that toppled the Jin court in Luoyang in 311 and Chang'an (modern-day Xi'an) in 316, ending the Western Jin dynasty (266–316). Some of these peoples, notably the Xiongnu of Shanxi and the Di of Guanzhong had lived in China for generations and were highly sinicized. Others such as the Tuoba and Murong Xianbei tribes migrated from China's periphery into Central Plains in the ensuing decades to compete for political supremacy over northern China. All of these states took on Han-style dynastic names and most claimed as having the Mandate of Heaven to rule all of China. They frequently fought against one another and the Jin, which continued to rule southern China from Jiankang (modern-day Nanjing) as the Eastern Jin dynasty (317-420).

Sixteen Kingdoms
Traditional Chinese十六國
Simplified Chinese十六国
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShíliù Guó
Bopomofoㄕˊ ㄌㄧㄡˋ ㄍㄨㄛˊ
Wade–GilesShih2-liu4 Kuo2
Tongyong PinyinShíh-liòu Guó
IPA[ʂɻ̩̌.ljôʊ kwǒ]
Wu
Romanization8Zeq-loq 7Koq
Xiang
IPAʂʐ̩²⁴ ləu̯²⁴ ku̯ɤ̞²⁴ Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 4: ̩) (help)
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳSṳ̍p-liuk Koet
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSahpluhk Gwok
JyutpingSap6 Luk6 Gwok3
IPA[sɐp̚˨.lʊk̚˨ kʷɔk̚˧]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJCha̍p-la̍k Kok
Teochew Peng'imZab8-lag8 Gog4
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCSĕk-lĕ̤k Guók
Northern Min
Jian'ou RomanizedSí-lṳ̀ Gŏ

Due to fierce competition among the states and internal political instability, the kingdoms of this era were mostly short-lived. For seven years from 376 to 383, the Former Qin unified all of northern and northwest China and Sichuan. The Former Qin's quest to conquer southern China was stopped by the Eastern Jin at the Battle of Fei River (in modern-day central Anhui), after which the Former Qin splintered and northern China experienced even greater political fragmentation, with as many as nine states co-existing in the north in 400. This period ended with the unification of northern China in 439 by the Northern Wei, a dynasty established by the Xianbei Tuoba clan, and the history of northern China entered the Northern Dynasties period.

The Sixteen Kingdoms marked the first time in the imperial era of Chinese history that non-Han rulers governed a vast portion of the Chinese heartland and ruled as Emperor of China. Each of the northern kingdoms, regardless of the ethnicity of its founders and rulers, was multi-ethnic in character, and their rulers were sinicized to varying degrees, adopting a diversity of approaches to governance that drew on different mixes of Han and non-Han institutions and customs. The challenges that these rulers confronted — how to govern both Han and non-Han peoples, the degree to which they should adopt Chinese culture, and how in doing so they redefined what it meant to be Chinese — would persist through the subsequent Northern and Southern dynasties period, from which emerged the Sui and Tang dynasties with their more inclusive governance, multi-ethnic character and cosmopolitan culture.

The fall of the Western Jin dynasty amidst the rise of non-Han regimes in northern China during the Sixteen Kingdoms period resembles the fall of the Western Roman Empire amidst invasions by the Huns and Germanic tribes in Europe, which also occurred in the 4th to 5th centuries. While the division of Roman empire in 395 AD became permanent, China was able to reunify by integrating the barbarians from the Sixteen Kingdoms era into government and society. The broader dynamic of non-Chinese rulers adapting their rule to China would recur with the Liao, Jin (1115–1234), Yuan and Qing dynasties and continue to shape Chinese history into the early 20th century.

Period Name and Constituent Kingdoms

edit

The term "Sixteen Kingdoms" was first used by the 6th-century historian Cui Hong in the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms, a compilation of available records from the states that appeared during the period. These were the five Liangs (Former, Later, Northern, Southern and Western), four Yans (Former, Later, Northern, and Southern), three Qins (Former, Later and Western), two Zhaos (Han/Former and Later), Cheng-Han and Xia.

Several other states from this period Cui Hong did not include Duan Qi, Western Yan, Ran Wei, Zhai Wei, Chouchi, and Tuyuhun. Nor did he include the Dai whose successor the Northern Wei, unified northern China and became the first of the Northern dynasties. The history of the Dai and Northern Wei is found in a later record, the Book of Wei.

Also excluded from the historiography are the short-lived regimes that broke away from the Eastern Jin after the dynasty was reconstituted in southern China. Regimes such as Huan Chu and Qiao Shu emerged from political turmoil within the Eastern Jin court.

The sixteen kingdoms

edit
# Regime Name[a] Period Dur.
(yrs)
Ethnicity
of Rulers
Founder Capital(s) Ended by Location Other Rulers
1 Cheng-Han[b]
成→漢
304–347[c] 43 Di
(Ba-Di)
Li Xiong 李雄
Temple: Taizong 太宗
Posthumous: Emperor Wu 武帝
Chengdu (304–347)
(Chengdu, Sichuan)
Eastern Jin
(under Huan Wen)
Modern Sichuan and Chongqing in southwestern China; the only Sixteen Kingdom based in the southwest Li Te 李特 (303)[d]
Li Liu 李流 (303)
Li Ban 李班 (334, ~5 months)
Li Qi 李期 (334–338)
Li Shou 李壽 (338–343)
Li Shi 李勢 (343–347)
2 Han (Former Zhao)[e]
漢→趙 / 前趙
304–329[f] 25 Xiongnu
(Five Divisions)
Liu Yuan 劉淵
Temple: Gaozu 高祖
Posthumous: Emperor Guangwen 光文帝
Lishi (304–308)
(Lishi, Lüliang, Shanxi)
Puzi (308–309)
(Xiangning, Linfen, Shanxi)
Pingyang (309–319)
(Linfen, Shanxi)
Chang'an (319–329)
(Xi'an, Shaanxi)
Later Zhao Modern Shanxi, Shaanxi, and parts of Henan and Gansu in north-central China Liu He 劉和 (310, 7 days)
Liu Cong 劉聰 (310–318)
Liu Can 劉粲 (318, ~1 month)
Liu Yao 劉曜 (318–329)
Liu Xi 劉熙 (329, months)
3 Zhao (Later)
後趙
319–351 32 Jie Shi Le 石勒
Temple: Gaozu 高祖
Posthumous: Emperor Ming 明帝
Xiangguo (319–335)
(Xingtai, Hebei)
Ye (335–351)
(Linzhang, Handan, Hebei)
Ran Wei Most of northern China including modern Hebei, Henan, Shandong, Shanxi, Shaanxi, and parts of Anhui, Jiangsu, Liaoning, and Gansu Shi Hong 石弘 (333–334)
Shi Hu 石虎 (334–349)
Shi Shi 石世 (349, 33 days)
Shi Zun 石遵 (349, ~183 days)
Shi Jian 石鑒 (349–350, ~103 days)
Shi Zhi 石祗 (350–351)
4 Liang (Former)
前涼
301–376[g] 75 Han Chinese Zhang Gui 張軌
Posthumous: Duke Wu 武公
Guzang (301–376)
(Wuwei, Gansu)
Former Qin Modern Gansu and parts of Ningxia and Xinjiang in northwestern China; extended influence into the Western Regions Zhang Shi 張寔 (314–320)
Zhang Mao 張茂 (320–324)
Zhang Jun 張駿 (324–346)
Zhang Chonghua 張重華 (346–353)
Zhang Yaoling 張曜靈 (353, deposed)
Zhang Zuo 張祚 (353–355)
Zhang Xuanjing 張玄靚 (355–363)
Zhang Tianxi 張天錫 (363–376)
5 Yan (Former)
前燕
337–370 33 Xianbei
(Murong)
Murong Huang 慕容皝
Temple: Taizu 太祖
Posthumous: Emperor Wenming 文明帝
Longcheng (337–350)
(Chaoyang, Liaoning)
Ji (350–357)
(Beijing)
Ye (357–370)
(Linzhang, Handan, Hebei)
Former Qin Modern Liaoning, Hebei, Shandong, Henan, and Shanxi in northeastern and north-central China Murong Jun 慕容儁 (348–360)
Murong Wei 慕容暐 (360–370)
6 Qin (Former)
前秦
351–394 43 Di Fu Jiàn 苻健
Temple: Shizu 世祖
Posthumous: Emperor Jingming 景明帝
Chang'an (351–385)
(Xi'an, Shaanxi)
Jinyang (385–386)
(Taiyuan, Shanxi)
Nan'an (386–394)
(near Longxi, Gansu)
Huangzhong (394)
(Ledu, Haidong, Qinghai)
Later Qin / Western Qin At its peak (376–383), all of northern China from modern Liaoning to Xinjiang and south into Sichuan; the only Sixteen Kingdom to unify the entire north Fu Sheng 苻生 (355–357)
Fu Jiān 苻堅 (357–385)
Fu Pi 苻丕 (385–386)
Fu Deng 苻登 (386–394)
Fu Chong 苻崇 (394, months)
7 Yan (Later)
後燕
384–409 25 Xianbei
(Murong)
Murong Chui 慕容垂
Temple: Shizu 世祖
Posthumous: Emperor Chengwu 成武帝
Zhongshan (384–397)
(Dingzhou, Hebei)
Longcheng (397–409)
(Chaoyang, Liaoning)
Northern Yan[h] Modern Hebei, Liaoning, Shandong, and Henan in northeastern China; after 397, reduced to Liaoning Murong Bao 慕容寶 (396–398)
Lan Han 蘭汗 (398, usurper, ~3 months)
Murong Sheng 慕容盛 (398–401)
Murong Xi 慕容熙 (401–407)
8 Qin (Later)
後秦
384–417 33 Qiang Yao Chang 姚萇
Temple: Taizu 太祖
Posthumous: Emperor Wuzhao 武昭帝
Chang'an (386–417)[i]
(Xi'an, Shaanxi)
Eastern Jin
(under Liu Yu)
Modern Shaanxi, Henan, Gansu, and parts of Sichuan in central and northwestern China Yao Xing 姚興 (394–416)
Yao Hong 姚泓 (416–417)
9 Qin (Western)
西秦
385–400;
409–431[j]
37 Xianbei
(Qifu)
Qifu Guoren 乞伏國仁
Posthumous: Prince Xuanlie 宣烈王
Yongcheng (385–388)
(near Lanzhou, Gansu)
Jincheng (388–395)
(Lanzhou, Gansu)
Yuanchuan (395–400)
(near Linxia, Gansu)
Dujianshan (409–412)
(near Lintan, Gansu)
Tanjiao (412–414)
(near Linxia, Gansu)
Fuhan (414–430)
(near Linxia, Gansu)
Nan'an (430–431)
(near Longxi, Gansu)
Xia Modern eastern Gansu and southeastern Qinghai in northwestern China Qifu Gangui 乞伏乾歸 (388–400; 409–412)
Qifu Chipan 乞伏熾磐 (412–428)
Qifu Mumo 乞伏暮末 (428–431)
10 Liang (Later)
後涼
386–403 17 Di Lü Guang 呂光
Posthumous: Yiwu 懿武 (Heavenly King)
Guzang (386–403)
(Wuwei, Gansu)
Later Qin Modern central Gansu in northwestern China; centred on the Hexi Corridor Lü Shao 呂紹 (399, days)
Lü Zuan 呂纂 (399–401)
Lü Long 呂隆 (401–403)
11 Liang (Southern)
南涼
397–414 17 Xianbei
(Tufa)
Tufa Wugu 禿髮烏孤
Posthumous: Prince Wu 武王
Lianchuan (397–399)
(near Hualong, Qinghai)
Ledu (399–402)
(Ledu, Haidong, Qinghai)
Xiping (402–406)
(Xining, Qinghai)
Guzang (406–410)
(Wuwei, Gansu)
Ledu (410–414)
(Ledu, Haidong, Qinghai)
Western Qin Modern eastern Qinghai and central Gansu in northwestern China Tufa Lilugu 禿髮利鹿孤 (399–402)
Tufa Rutan 禿髮傉檀 (402–414)
12 Liang (Northern)
北涼
397–439[k] 42 Xiongnu
(Lushuihu)[l]
Duan Ye 段業 (founder, titular)
Deposed by:
Juqu Mengxun 沮渠蒙遜
Temple: Taizu 太祖
Posthumous: Prince Wuxuan 武宣王
Zhangye (397–439)
(Zhangye, Gansu)
Northern Wei Modern central and western Gansu in northwestern China; the last of the Sixteen Kingdoms to fall Juqu Mujian 沮渠牧犍 (433–439)
13 Yan (Southern)
南燕
398–410 12 Xianbei
(Murong)
Murong De 慕容德
Temple: Shizong 世宗
Posthumous: Emperor Xianwu 獻武帝
Huatai (398–399)
(near Cao, Heze, Shandong)
Guanggu (399–410)
(Qingzhou, Weifang, Shandong)
Eastern Jin
(under Liu Yu)
Modern Shandong province in eastern China Murong Chao 慕容超 (405–410)
14 Liang (Western)
西涼
400–421 21 Han Chinese Li Gao 李暠
Temple: Taizu 太祖
Posthumous: Prince Wuzhao 武昭王
Dunhuang (400–405)
(Dunhuang, Gansu)
Jiuquan (405–421)
(Jiuquan, Gansu)
Northern Liang Modern western Gansu in northwestern China; centred on the western end of the Hexi Corridor Li Xin 李歆 (417–420)
Li Xun 李恂 (420–421)
15 Yan (Northern)
北燕
407–436 29 Goguryeo[m] / Han Chinese Gao Yun 高雲
Posthumous: Emperor Huiyi 惠懿帝
Longcheng (407–436)
(Chaoyang, Liaoning)
Northern Wei Modern western Liaoning in northeastern China Feng Ba 馮跋 (409–430)
Feng Hong 馮弘 (430–436)
16 Xia
407–431 24 Xiongnu
(Tiefu)
Helian Bobo 赫連勃勃
Temple: Shizu 世祖
Posthumous: Emperor Wulie 武烈帝
Tongwancheng (407–428)
(Jingbian, Yulin, Shaanxi)
Shanggui (428–431)
(Tianshui, Gansu)
Northern Wei Modern northern Shaanxi, Ordos Plateau in Inner Mongolia, and later parts of Gansu in north-central China Helian Chang 赫連昌 (425–428)
Helian Ding 赫連定 (428–431)

Other Breakaway Regimes of the Period

edit
Regime Name[a] Period Dur.
(yrs)
Ethnicity
of Rulers
Founder Capital(s) Ended by Location Other Rulers
1 Dai
310–376 66 Xianbei
(Tuoba)
Tuoba Yilu 拓跋猗盧
Posthumous: Emperor Mu 穆帝
Shengle (310–376)
(Horinger, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia)
Former Qin[n] Modern central Inner Mongolia and northern Shanxi. Tuoba Pugen 拓跋普根 (316)
Tuoba Yulü 拓跋鬱律 (316–321)
Tuoba Heru 拓跋賀傉 (321–325)
Tuoba Hena 拓跋紇那 (325–329; 335–337)
Tuoba Yihuai
拓跋翳槐 (329–335; 337–338)
Tuoba Shiyijian 拓跋什翼犍 (338–376)
2 Wei (Ran)
冉魏
350–352 2 Han Chinese Ran Min 冉閔
Posthumous: Wudao Heavenly King 武悼天王
Ye (350–352)
(Linzhang, Handan, Hebei)
Former Yan Modern southern Hebei and northern Henan province
3 Yan (Western)
西燕
384–394 10 Xianbei
(Murong)
Murong Hong 慕容泓
Posthumous: Prince Wei 威王[o]
Chang'an (384–386)
(Xi'an, Shaanxi)
Various (386–389)
Changzi (389–394)
(Changzi, Changzhi, Shanxi)
Later Yan Shanxi province Murong Chong 慕容沖 (384–386)
Duan Sui 段隨 (386, days)
Murong Yi 慕容顗 (386, ~1 month)
Murong Yao 慕容瑤 (386, days)
Murong Zhong 慕容忠 (386)
Murong Yong 慕容永 (386–394)
4 Wei (Zhai)
翟魏
388–392 4 Dingling Zhai Liao 翟遼 Huatai (388–392)
(near Hua, Anyang, Henan)
Later Yan Modern northeastern Henan and southwestern Shandong in eastern China Zhai Zhao 翟釗 (391–392)
5 Chouchi
仇池
296–371;
385–443[p]
inter-
mittent
Di Yang Maosou 楊茂搜 Chouchi (296–443)
(near Xihe, Longnan, Gansu)
Northern Wei / Liu Song Modern southern Gansu and northwestern Sichuan; a mountainous area between Guanzhong and Sichuan Basin Numerous successors of the Yang clan across multiple periods
6 Qi (Duan)[q]
段齊
350–356 6 Xianbei
(Duan)
Duan Kan 段龕 Guanggu (350–356)
(near Qingzhou, Shandong)
Former Yan Modern Shandong province in eastern China
7 Tuyuhun Kingdom
吐谷渾
329–371;
405–663[r]
c. 378[s] Xianbei
(Murong)
Ye Yan 叶延
(r. 329–351)[t]
Mukechuan 慕克川 (329–376)
(near Guinan, Qinghai)
Fuqi 伏俟城 (later periods)
(near Gonghe, Qinghai)
Tibetan Empire Modern Qinghai and parts of Gansu and northwestern Sichuan Numerous successors of the Murong/Tuyuhun clan across nearly four centuries, including Shuluogan 树洛干 (r. 405–417), Achai 阿柴 (r. 417–426) and Muguì 慕璝 (r. 426–436)
8 Wei (Northern)
北魏
386–535 149 Xianbei
(Tuoba)
Tuoba Gui 拓跋珪
Posthumous: Emperor Daowu 道武帝[u]
Shengle (386–398)
(Horinger, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia)
Pingcheng (398–494)
(Datong, Shanxi)
Luoyang (494–534)
(Luoyang, Henan)
Split into Eastern Wei and Western Wei[v] Initially central Inner Mongolia and northern Shanxi; at its height, all of northern China from Liaoning to Gansu and from the steppe frontier to the Huai River Tuoba Si 拓跋嗣 (409–423)
Tuoba Tao 拓跋燾 (423–452)
Tuoba Jun 拓跋濬 (452–465)
Tuoba Hong 拓跋弘 (465–471)
Yuan Hong 元宏 (471–499)
Yuan Ke 元恪 (499–515)
and four further emperors to 535

  unified northern China to end the Sixteen Kingdoms period   Other regimes that outlived the Sixteen Kingdoms period

History

edit

Background

edit
Left: Bronze seal conferred by the Han government upon a Xiongnu chieftain who had submitted to the Eastern Han dynasty (25–220). The seal was unearthed in Shangsunjiazhai, Datong Hui and Tu Autonomous County, Qinghai province in 1979. The Xiongnu that settled in modern-day Hexi Corridor and eastern Qinghai during the Eastern Han became known as the "Lushuihu". Juqu Mengxun, who seized control of the Northern Liang kingdom in 401 was a Lushuihu chieftain.[1] Right: An iron sword with a ring-shaped pommel of the Xianbei from the Western Jin dynasty (266–316) unearthed in Meiligaitu Village, Zhuozi County, Ulanqab, Inner Mongolia. During the Western Jin, the Tuoba Xianbei clan settled in modern-day central Inner Mongolia, serving as a vassal to the Jin court.[2]

Since the Western Han dynasty (202 BC–9 AD), the non-Han peoples of the northern steppe and western highlands had been resettling into northern China. Along the frontiers in the north, the Chinese court employed a policy of recruiting surrendered tribes to serve as auxiliaries to defend against attacks from nomadic enemies. The Wuhuan tribes submitted as Chinese tributaries in the northeast, and in 50 AD, the Eastern Han dynasty (25–220) established the Southern Xiongnu vassal state in northern Bing province. In the northwest, western herders known as the Qiang and Di were brought in, predominantly to work as farmers and slaves in the Guanzhong basin. As migrants, these people lived among the ethnic Han and were sinicized to different degrees while retaining their tribal affiliations. However, they also faced discrimination and oppression, leading to racial tension and frequent rebellions.[3]

The fall of Eastern Han (189–220) and the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) brought the non-Han people closer to the Chinese heartlands. After revolting and murdering their pro-Han chanyu in 189, the Southern Xiongnu tribes dissolved their government and dispersed throughout Bing province. Several frontier commanderies in Bing had to be abandoned, but the Chinese court retained the region corresponding with modern-day Shanxi, where the remaining Xiongnu forces were reorganized into the Five Divisions near Taiyuan. The Wuhuan also rebelled around this time but suffered defeat, with many of their people forcibly relocated and scattered in areas more south. The Xianbei tribes of the steppe such as the Murong and Tuoba were drawn to the power vacuum left behind by the Wuhuan in the north and northeast, where they too became Chinese vassals. In the northwest, the population of the Qiang, Di and other non-Han groups continued to grow, supplemented by the arrival of the Xianbei. By the late 3rd-century, the population of the tribes in the Guanzhong and Shanxi had swelled, causing a few Chinese officials to advocate for their repatriation beyond the borderland.[4][5]

Despite efforts to appease and punish, disparity between the ethnic Han and tribes persisted into the Western Jin period (266–316). The War of the Eight Princes (291–306) during the reign of the Emperor Hui of Jin severely weakened and divided imperial authority. Corruption was rampant among the Chinese elites and administrators, and popular rebellions against heavy taxation and repression erupted throughout the country. As the Jin princes exhausted the imperial army with their civil wars, they turned to the frontier auxiliaries as their source of military power, placing the tribes in prime position to exploit the chaos.[6]

The beginning of the Sixteen Kingdoms period is often considered to be 304 AD. That year, as part of a rebellion that began back in 301, Li Xiong, a Ba-Di chieftain and refugee from the Guanzhong, formally claimed the imperial title of King and formed his state of Cheng-Han (304–347) in Sichuan, notably becoming the only state among the Sixteen Kingdoms to be based in southwestern China. Most of the later states were also founded by non-Han leaders whose family had lived in China for generations or were in the process of sinicization, and they are collectively known in historiography as the "Five Barbarians".[7]

Fall of Western Jin to the Han-Zhao (304–318)

edit
Distribution of the non-Han peoples within and outside of northern China prior to the fall of Western Jin.

During the Jin civil wars, Liu Yuan, a noble from the Five Divisions and a descendant of the Southern Xiongnu chanyu, was serving as a general for one of the princes. The Five Divisions plotted to take advantage of the disorder by staging a revolt with Liu Yuan as their leader. After convincing his prince that he would rally his people to fight for his side, Liu Yuan was allowed to return home to Shanxi, and upon his arrival, he rebelled and openly declared his intent to restore the fallen Han dynasty. His regime, later renamed Zhao, is designated by historians as the Han-Zhao (304–329).[8]

By the end of the War of the Eight Princes in 306, the Jin military in northern China had become severely weakened and ineffective in dealing with the various uprisings led by both the Han Chinese and the tribes. Many of these rebel groups, aggrieved by the civil wars and ongoing famines, flocked to join the Han-Zhao and soon encroached on the Chinese capital of Luoyang. In 311, less than a year after the ascension of Liu Cong to the Han throne, his forces annihilated the Jin imperial army and captured Luoyang along with Emperor Huai in the Disaster of Yongjia. In 316, the Western Jin came to an end after Liu Cong's cousin Liu Yao seized Chang'an and Emperor Min, though pockets of Jin resistance continued to resist in the north. In the south, where the regions were mostly unaffected by the chaos in the north, the prince, Sima Rui claimed the imperial title at Jiankang, preserving the dynasty as the Eastern Jin (318–420).

Rise and fall of Later Zhao (318–351)

edit
A bronze Buddha statue created under the Later Zhao during the reign of Shi Hu in 338. It is the earliest known Buddha sculpture produced in China.[9]

After Liu Cong's death in 318, a failed coup was launch which saw his successor and most of the Han imperial family wiped out. The empire soon split between Liu Yao in the west and the powerful general, Shi Le in the east. Shi Le was an ethnic Jie of Southern Xiongnu descent in Bing province. He initially worked as an indentured farm laborer before joining Liu Yuan's rebellion, and during his stint as a Han general, he gained considerable power over the Hebei region, ruling in all but name. In 319, he founded the Later Zhao (319–351), and after a decade-long confrontation, he decisively defeated Liu Yao at the Battle of Luoyang and destroyed the Han-Zhao in 329, placing most of northern China under his control.

To consolidate his rule, Shi Le reinforced the dual-system of government introduced by the Han-Zhao to impose separate governance for the Chinese and non-Chinese. After he died, his adoptive brother, Shi Hu seized the throne from his son in 334 and ruled the empire for the next 15 years. Shi Hu was described by records as a cruel and tyrannical ruler, especially towards the common Han Chinese people. On the other hand, he supported the proliferation of Buddhism in the north. He employed the Kuchean monk, Fotu Cheng as one of his chief court advisors, allowing him to spread his teachings among the common people and build hundreds of monastries.[10] Shi Hu maintained a stalemate with the Eastern Jin and other neighbouring states, unable to make significant gains from his military campaigns. After his death in 349, his family members engaged in a fratricidal succession for the throne, culminating in his adopted Han Chinese grandson, Ran Min, seizing the government and carrying out a large-scale ethnic cleansing of the Jie people. The Later Zhao was soon destroyed by Ran Min in 351.

During the fall of Western Jin, some Chinese officials opted to find refuge in the farthest reaches of northern China, which later remained largely independent from Later Zhao control. In Gansu, the Chinese provincial inspector, Zhang Gui and his family governed the region as early as 301 and continued to do so long after the Western Jin's demise. Though they outwardly remained loyal to the Eastern Jin and never claimed the imperial title (with the exception of Zhang Zuo), their remoteness from the southern court allowed them to self-govern without much intervention, so historiography often refer to them as a sovereign regime known as the Former Liang (301–376). The Former Liang preserved much of Han literati culture in the north and expanded their influence into the Western Regions.[11]

Around the Liao river basin, the Murong clan of Xianbei ethnicity also professed their allegiance to the Eastern Jin, but internally vied for independence. The Murong allowed Chinese refugees to settle in their domain and employed them as officials to serve in their civil administration. In 337, while still claiming to be a vassal of Jin, their chieftain, Murong Huang took the title of Prince and founded the Former Yan (337–370). He conquered the rival Duan and Yuwen tribes as well as forced the Goguryeo and Buyeo into submission, thus allowing his state to compete with the Later Zhao.[12] Other regimes that existed around this time but are not listed among the Sixteen Kingdoms are the Tuoba-Xianbei of Dai and the Di-led Chouchi.

Former Qin and the brief unification of northern China (351–383)

edit
Left: Painting of heavy cavalry (cataphracts) from the 4th-century tomb of Dong Shou, a Former Yan general who fled to Goguryeo. Right: The earliest extant of the double stirrup from the tomb of a Northern Yan noble. The development of the stirrup during this period gave rise to widespread use of heavy cavalry and allowed the Xianbei horsemen to dominate the battlefield.[13]

In the course of the Later Zhao collapse, Ran Min formed his new state of Ran Wei (350–352). However, many Zhao generals refused to acknowledge him, and northern China fragmented into numerous regions controlled by warlords. The Former Yan, under Murong Jun, seized the moment to expand into the Central Plains. In 352, his brother, Murong Ke defeated and captured Ran Min at the Battle of Liantai. Murong Jun thereupon broke away from the Eastern Jin and proclaimed himself as emperor. The Yan continued their southward expansion, reaching all the way to the Huai river and establishing dominance over the northeast. After Murong Jun's death in 360, Murong Ke acted as regent for his child heir and maintained the Yan's military supremacy through his competent leadership. However, when he too died in 367, the issues of unbridled corruption among the aristorcracy and infighting within the imperial family became evident and rapidly worsened.[14]

Among the states that emerged from the chaos was the Former Qin (351–394), established by the Later Zhao general, Fu Jiàn of Di ethnicity who captured and secured control over the Guanzhong region. In 357, his nephew Fu Jiān seized the throne from his despotic son in a coup. Despite his ethnicity, the younger Fu Jiān revered Confucianism and entrusted most of state affairs to his ethnic Chinese advisor, Wang Meng. The two enacted policies to help the Qin recover from the early wars and famines, while also effectively putting down rebellions and corruption throughout their domain. Within a decade, the Former Qin was transformed into a regional power in the northwest, competing with both the Former Yan and Eastern Jin.[15]

In 370, Wang Meng led the Former Qin to invade the Former Yan, and though outnumbered, he was able to vanquish them in one fell swoop. Riding on his momentum, Fu Jiān unified northern China by subjugating the Chouchi, Former Liang and Dai while also capturing Sichuan from the Eastern Jin by 376. Fu Jiān had a tendency to spare and recruit his enemies, employing many of them in his government and military. With most of China under his rule, he wanted to complete the unification by ending the Eastern Jin once and for all. Wang Meng opposed this move, and before his death in 375, he warned Fu Jiān that he first needed to address the growing issues between the different ethnic groups in his domain, but Fu Jiān did not heed his advice.[16] In 383, he launched an invasion of southern China, where his vast army was defeated in a devastating rout at the Battle of Fei River by a significantly smaller Eastern Jin force.[17]

17th-century portrait of the Former Qin poet, Su Hui with her palindrome poem, the Star Gauge (璇璣圖). Few poems from the Sixteen Kingdoms survived, and the Star Gauge is unique as it consists of 29 by 29 grid of characters which can be read in roughly 3,000 different ways.[18]

Fragmentation after the Battle of Feishui (383–394)

edit

After the Battle of Feishui, the power of the Former Qin quickly unraveled as various regimes in the north broke loose. In 384, Fu Jiān's general and a prince of the fallen Former Yan, Murong Chui rebelled in the Hebei and founded the Later Yan (384–409), intending to restore his family's empire. His relatives responded by forming the Western Yan (384–394; not listed among the Sixteen Kingdom) and laid siege on Fu Jiān at his capital in Chang'an. During the war, Fu Jiān's general of Qiang ethnicity, Yao Chang also rebelled and established the Later Qin (384–417). In 385, the Western Yan ousted Fu Jiān from Chang'an, and he was soon captured and executed by Yao Chang.[19]

More states began to spring up in light of Fu Jiān's death. That same year, the Xianbei former vassal, Qifu Guoren founded the Western Qin (385–431) in eastern Gansu and the Chouchi was restored. In 386, the Di general, Lü Guang established the Later Liang (386–403) in western Gansu while another Xianbei leader, Tuoba Gui revived the Dai as the Northern Wei (386–535; not listed among the Sixteen Kingdoms). During the Later Yan's conquest of the northeast, the Dingling troops under Murong Chui mutinied, and in 388, they formed their state of Zhai Wei (388–392; not listed among the Sixteen Kingdoms).

Later Qin and the propagation of Buddhism (394–417)

edit
Bodhisattva sculptures at Maijishan Grottoes, a series of Buddhist rock-cut caves in Tianshui, Gansu. Construction of the grottoes began during the Later Qin period and was expanded by later dynasties such as the Western Qin and Northern Wei.

For the next decade, Yao Chang fought against remnants of the Former Qin for supremacy over the Guanzhong. In 394, he was succeeded by his son, Yao Xing, who shortly after crushed the last remaining power of the Former Qin. He then ushered the Later Qin into a period of relative peace and prosperity. During his reign, the Later Qin received the nominal submissions of several neighbouring states such as the Later Liang and Western Qin and conquered the Henan region from the Eastern Jin, including the city of Luoyang.

Much like Fu Jiān, Yao Xing strongly adhered to Confucian principles. He turned Chang'an into an education hub by establishing schools and attracting many prospective scholars near and far. He was also a devout follower of Buddhism and actively spread the religion through widespread state support. In 401, after defeating the Later Liang into submission, he welcomed into his court the Kuchean monk, Kumārajīva and sponsored him to translate many Buddhist sutras, treatises and other texts from Sanskrit to Chinese. Mahayana Buddhism flourished under Yao Xing, with most of the Later Qin population following the teachings of the Buddha.[20]

North of the Later Qin heartlands was the Ordos Plateau, which had long been home to various roaming tribes. These tribes, under constant threat by the Northern Wei in the east, submitted to the Qin and acted as a buffer on their northern frontier. As the raids on these tribes intensified, the Later Qin carried out a retaliatory campaign against the Northern Wei, but suffered a decisive defeat at the Battle of Chaibi in 402. From there, the empire stagnated, and as the Qin entered peace talks with the Wei, Helian Bobo of the Tiefu tribe rebelled in the Ordos and founded the Helian Xia (407–431), beginning a protracted war that drained the Qin's power and resources. Yao Xing soon lost control over his other vassals, and when he died in 416, he left his heir contending with his relatives over the throne. In 417, the Eastern Jin commander, Liu Yu took advantage of the tumultuous situation to conquer the Later Qin.

Gansu: The Four Liangs and Western Qin

edit

In the Gansu, the Later Liang came to blows with the Western Qin. Though they gained the upper hand early on, the Liang was badly routed and suffered heavy losses during their invasion of Qin in 397. The defeat sparked upheaval in Later Liang, as soon after, the Xianbei chieftain, Tufa Wugu broke away and founded the Southern Liang (397–414), followed by the Chinese governor, Duan Ye, who established the Northern Liang (397–439) with the support of the Lushuihu chieftain, Juqu Mengxun. In 400, the Chinese general, Li Gao rebelled against the Northern Liang and formed the Western Liang (400–421). The next year, Juqu Mengxun deposed Duan Ye and took over the Northern Liang.[21]

Between 400 and 401, the Later Qin carried out two western expeditions to Gansu, annexing the Western Qin and forcing the four Liangs into nominal submission. Unable to withstand anymore attacks, the Later Liang gave up their remaining territory to the Later Qin in 403. As the Later Qin weakened, the Southern Liang broke off relations in 407 while the Western Qin reestablished themselves in 409. The Southern Liang suffered heavy losses on the battlefield and fell to the Western Qin in 414. In 421, Juqu Mengxun pacified the Western Liang, leaving Northern Liang and Western Qin to compete for Gansu. Due to internal and external pressure, the Western Qin declined and were subjugated by the Helian Xia in 431, giving the Northern Liang sole control over Gansu for a brief period of time.

Northern Wei and the reunification of northern China (394–439)

edit
Procession
Mounted warrior
Warrior with shield
Horse
Terracotta warriors of the Northern Wei dynasty

Division of Later Yan

edit

In the northeast, Murong Chui spent the majority of his reign waging war and quelling rebellions to recover his family's holdings in the northeast. He extinguished the Zhai Wei in 392 and conquered the Western Yan in 394. Yet, his former ally, the Northern Wei under Tuoba Gui remained a nuisance to his empire. In 395, he sent his sons to lead a punitive expedition against the Northern Wei, but Tuoba Gui dealt them a grave defeat at the Battle of Canhe Slope. In 396, Murong Chui personally led another campaign to Northern Wei in retribution, but died of illness along the way.[22]

Not long after Murong Chui's heir took the throne, Tuoba Gui launched his own invasion of Later Yan. The Murong clan decided to concentrate their forces to their major cities, which allowed the Northern Wei to overrun the Central Plains. Though Tuoba Gui initially struggled to take their cities, he eventually won a decisive victory over the main Later Yan forces at the Battle of Baisi.[23] The Murong family fell into infighting; the emperor decided to evacuate the Central Plains for his ancestral home in Liaodong, while an offshoot led by his uncle, Murong De founded the Southern Yan (398–410) and occupied the Shandong region. Following a coup, the Later Yan branch was later replaced by the Northern Yan (407–436), whose founder, Gao Yun was of Goguryeo descent, but his successor, Feng Ba, was a Han Chinese.[24]

Reunification of Emperor Taiwu

edit
Ruins of Tongwancheng, the capital of the Helian Xia built in the early 5th century by Tiefu chieftain Helian Bobo in modern-day Jingbian, in northern Shaanxi province, near the border with Inner Mongolia. The city was captured by the Northern Wei in 427.

With the Yan divided and a foothold on the Central Plains, the Northern Wei became the new regional power in the northeast. After Tuoba Gui's assassination in 409, his son, Tuoba Si, posthumously known as Emperor Mingyuan, succeeded him and prioritized in stabilizing the state over expanding. In the northwest, shortly after the Eastern Jin destroyed Later Qin, Helian Bobo took the opportunity to seize the Guanzhong region as Liu Yu returned to the south in 418.

In 423, Emperor Taiwu of Northern Wei ascended the throne with ambitions to unify northern China. Following the death of Helian Bobo in 425, he intensified his assault on the Helian Xia that by 428, he had captured both the Xia capital, Tongwancheng and their emperor. The emperor's brother, Helian Ding succeeded him and continued to resist. He made a last-ditch effort to save the empire by expanding westward, even conquering the weakened Western Qin in 431. However, as he attempted to invade the Northern Liang later that year, he was captured in a raid by the Tuyuhun nomads of modern Qinghai and sent to the Northern Wei as a prisoner.

With the defeat of their last major rival in northern China, reunification under the Northern Wei was inevitable. Emperor Taiwu turned his focus to the Northern Yan in 432, launching incessant attacks on their border. Eventually, in 436, the Northern Yan ruler was unable to resist a large-scale invasion by the Northern Wei and fled his territory for Goguryeo. The Northern Liang became the last of the Sixteen Kingdoms. Despite a marriage alliance between the two sides, Emperor Taiwu accused the Northern Liang of plotting rebellion and sent an expeditionary force into Gansu in 439. Placed under siege, the last ruler of Northern Liang soon surrendered. The Sixteen Kingdoms era came to an end, as the Northern Wei unification would last for nearly a century.

Relations with Eastern Jin

edit

Diplomatic status

edit
Migration routes into southern China during the fall of Western Jin.

For the majority of the period, the Sixteen Kingdoms coincided with the Eastern Jin dynasty in southern China. Most people at the time viewed the Eastern Jin as a direct continuation of the Western Jin, since they were ruled by the same imperial Sima clan albeit distant members, and therefore had more right to rule than the other coinciding states. The Eastern Jin insisted on their status as supreme overlord and refused to treat any of their adversaries as equals. For instance, when the Later Zhao sent a diplomatic mission to the south to establish equal relations, they burnt the embassy's gifts and expelled the envoy. Some of the Sixteen Kingdoms such as Former Liang and Former Yan also agreed to nominally recognize the Eastern Jin as their suzerain for their source of legitimacy.[25]

Eastern Jin efforts to retake the north

edit
Map showing Liu Yu's northern expeditions (409–417).

Yet, the Eastern Jin court was often divided on the subject of reclaiming lost territory. Many among the Jin elites, both the southern natives and northern migrants, enjoyed their new influence in the south and were content with maintaining a border along or above the Huai river in the north. On the other hand, reunification was still recognized as a moral obligation, and military generals who bring success from their campaigns were rewarded with titles and prestige. There were real concerns that powerful commanders would use the influence they gained from their campaigns as leverage against the court and the emperor. Hence, the court was often reluctant and passive in supporting expeditions against the Sixteen Kingdoms.[26]

The first significant attempt to retake the north was carried out by Zu Ti, who led a voluntary expedition force in response to Emperor Min's call to arms in 313. Sima Rui, then still a prince, showed little interest in the expedition, and only provided Zu Ti very meager resources. Despite his limitations, Zu Ti managed to recapture a large swath of the Henan south of the Yellow River and repeatedly defeated the Later Zhao. However, with civil war looming back home, Sima Rui abruptly ended the expedition by stripping Zu Ti off his commanding role in 321, and his gains were swiftly reversed the following year.[27]

The aftermath of Wang Dun and Su Jun's rebellions further discouraged the Jin court from launching expeditions as they required time to recuperate. Nonetheless, in 346–347, without prior authorization of the court, the general, Huan Wen invaded and ended the Cheng-Han state, bringing Sichuan back under Jin rule.[28] Interest in recovering lost territory grew during the collapse of the Later Zhao, and Huan Wen was able to pressure the court into giving him command over the expeditionary forces. His first expedition against the Former Qin in 354 was unsuccessful, but his second expedition in 356 saw him recover the old capital of Luoyang. In 369, in his bid to claim the Jin throne, Huan Wen launched his third and final northern expedition against the Former Yan, but the campaign ended in failure as he suffered defeat at the Battle of Fangtou.

Not long after, Huan Wen died of illness and the Eastern Jin was faced with the rising power of Former Qin. Early on, the Jin lost Sichuan in 373 and then the major city of Xiangyang in 379. However, after their victory at the Battle of Feishui in 383, Jin forces led by Xie Xuan, Liu Laozhi others were able to recover them and push the Former Qin back all the way to the Yellow River. From there, the Eastern Jin reached a deadlock, and as internal strife and civil war plagued the Jin once more, the Later Qin seized the chance to annex the Henan region while the Southern Yan occupied Shandong in 399.

In 404, the Jin general, Liu Yu defeated the usurper, Huan Xuan and restored Emperor An to the throne. Liu Yu had ambitions to claim the throne for himself and built his legitimacy by launching northern expeditions. In 409–410, he led Jin forces to defeat and destroy the Southern Yan, thus recapturing the Shandong. In 416, taking advantage of the death of Yao Xing, he invaded Henan and captured Luoyang before turning towards the Guanzhong and seizing Chang'an. The last Later Qin ruler surrendered and was sent to Jiankang for execution. With the Later Qin destroyed, the Western Qin, Northern Liang and Western Liang nominally submitted to Eastern Jin authority. However, due to pressing matters back in the south, Liu Yu was forced to return, and in his absence, the Helian Xia invaded and conquered the Guanzhong. Despite the loss of the region, Liu Yu's expeditions were enough for him to usurp the throne and establish the Liu Song dynasty (420–479). The Liu Song and the rest of the Southern dynasties continued to wage war against their northern counterparts before the northern Sui dynasty (581–618) eventually unified China in 589.

Maps

edit

Chronology

edit
Chronology of the Sixteen Kingdoms with Ethnicity of Founders
  Xianbei   Xiongnu   Jie   Di   Qiang   Dingling   Han Chinese
303Jin Dynasty's rule over northern China and Sichuan begins to break down in 304WESTERN
JIN DYNASTY
*
266-317
304Cheng-Han
304-47
Han-Zhao
304-29
314
315Dai*
315-76
317
318Former Liang
318-76
EASTERN
JIN DYNASTY
*
318-420
319Later Zhao
319-51
329
330
337Former Yan
337-70
347
350Ran Wei*
350-52
351Former Qin
351-94
352
353
370
376
377From 376 to 383, Former Qin briefly unites northern China
384NORTHERN
WEI DYNASTY
*
386-534
Later Qin
384-417
Western Yan*
384-94
Later Yan
384-409
385Western Qin
385-400
386Later Liang
386-403
388Zhai Wei*
388-92
392
394
397Southern Liang
397-414
Northern Liang
397-439
398Southern Yan
398-410
400Western Liang
400-21
403
404
407Xia
407-31
409Western Qin
resurrected
409-31
Northern Yan
409-36
410
414
417
420LIU
SONG DYNASTY
*
420-79
421
431
436
439
440In 439, the Northern Wei reunites northern China
asterisk (*) denotes kingdoms not counted among the sixteen in the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms
bold denotes major kingdoms among the sixteen with large jurisdiction and their rulers elevated themselves as emperors

Governance

edit

Through generational exposure and cooperation with the ethnic Han scholar gentry, the Sixteen Kingdoms heavily adopted the Chinese style of imperial governance and customs. Many of their rulers claimed the titles of Emperor (帝; ) or King (王; Wáng), used era names and appointed their followers to official positions from the imperial Chinese system such as Grand Chancellor (丞相) and Grand Tutor (太傅). Additionally, the title of Heavenly King (天王; Tiān Wáng) was widely used during this period as a way for rulers to acknowledge that they still lack the requisite of an Emperor while still effectively acting as one.[29]

Many of the Sixteen Kingdoms also upheld separate governance between the Han and non-Chinese. During the Han-Zhao period, Liu Yuan claimed the title of Grand Chanyu, but later deferred the title to his crown prince for him to manage the affairs of the tribes with a status second only to the Emperor. Variations of the chanyutai (單于台; Office of the Chanyu) were implemented by later states such as the Later Zhao and Former Qin, either as a permanent or temporary function. The system was even applied by the Chinese-led regimes of Ran Wei and Northern Yan.[30][31]

Involvement of other ethnicities

edit
A mural painting showing a leisurely life scene from the Dingjiazha Tomb No. 5 of the Later LiangNorthern Liang period (384-441) in modern Jiuquan, Gansu.

The Goguryeo kingdom was a powerful and influential state in northern Korea and parts of northeastern China at the beginning of the Sixteen Kingdoms period. With the arrival of the Murong and the collapse of centralized authority in northern China, Goguryeo clashed on several instances with the Xianbei clan and their states in a century-long conflict. In 342, Former Yan captured and sacked the capital of Hwando, forcing Goguryeo into submission. After the fall of Former Yan, Goguryeo established friendly relations with the Former Qin, who introduced them to Buddhism through the monk Sundo in 372. Their feud with the Murong was reignited following the restoration of the Later Yan in 384. Under the dynamic leadership of King Gwanggaeto the Great, Goguryeo repeatedly defeated the Later Yan and conquered Liaodong in 404. Peace along the Goguryeo-Yan borders was finally attained in 407 with the founding of Northern Yan, as Gwanggaeto recognized their first ruler, Gao Yun, as a distant member of the Goguryeo imperial clan. Gwanggaeto and his son, King Jangsu, maintained relations with Northern Yan even after Chinese Feng clan succeeded Gao Yun. When Northern Yan fell in 436, Jangsu granted asylum to their last Heavenly King, Feng Hong, but as Feng was said to have acted insubordinately and demanded royal courtesy, Jangsu later had him executed.

After the Yuwen Xianbei tribe was defeated by the Former Yan in 344, the Kumo Xi and Khitan branches of the tribe survived and began increasing in strength north of You province. In 414, the Kumo Xi tribes sent a trade caravan to Northern Yan, then joined with the Khitan in declaring allegiance to Northern Yan, and then to Northern Wei after its destruction of Northern Yan. Thus, the Northern Wei held de facto rule over the entire Mongolian Plateau and the Liao River region.

In the Western Regions (modern Xinjiang) of the former Han Empire lay the kingdoms of Shanshan, Qiuzi, Yutian, Dongshi, and Shule. These kingdoms were often controlled or influenced by the various Liang kingdoms that existed during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. The Former Liang organized Gaochang Commandery (Chinese: 高昌郡) and Tiandi County (Chinese: 闐地縣) in the west, both under the administration of the Gaochang Governor. Day-to-day administration was run out of several forts: Western Regions Chief Clerk, Wu and Ji Colonel, and Jade Gate Commissioner of the Army. Other Liangzhou states generally followed this administrative system. In 382, the Former Qin ruler Fu Jiān sent General Lü Guang on a military expedition to the Dayuan kingdom and promoted him to Protector General of the western border regions. After Qin collapsed and Lü Guang founded the Later Liang, the western border forts and the Shanshan kingdom all became parts of or vassals to the Later Liang

Religion

edit
The White Horse Pagoda, Dunhuang, commemorating Kumarajiva's white horse which carried the scriptures to China, c. 384.

Though Buddhism first arrived in China in the 1st-century CE, the religion only began receiving mainstream recognition and popularity during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. Several rulers of the northern kingdoms patronized Buddhism which spread across northern China during the Sixteen Kingdoms and flourished during the subsequent Northern Dynasties. The Later Zhao was one of the earliest regimes in China to provide Buddhism with statewide backing. Monks such as Fotu Cheng and Dharmakṣema all occupied high-ranking positions in their governments and were allowed to spread their teachings to the masses.[10][32]

During the Former Qin, Fu Jiān was a strong patron of Buddhist scholarship. After capturing Xiangyang in 379, he invited the monk Dao An to Chang'an to catalogue Buddhist scriptures. When the teachings of the famed Kuchean monk, Kumārajīva, reached Chang'an, Dao An advised Fu Jiān to invite the Kumārajīva. In 382, Fu Jiān sent general Lü Guang to conquer the Western Regions (Tarim Basin) and bring Kumārajīva to Chang'an. Lü Guang captured Kucha and seized Kumārajīva, but the Former Qin collapsed after the Battle of Feishui in 383. Lü Guang founded the Later Liang and held Kumārajīva captive in western Gansu for 18 years. In 401, the Later Qin under Yao Xing conquered the Former Liang and Kumārajīva was able to settle in Chang'an and become one of the most influential translators of Buddhist sutras into Chinese. Another monk, Faxian began a pilgrimage from Later Qin territory in 399 to acquire Buddhist texts in India. He returned to China in 412 and resettled at Jiankang under the Eastern Jin, also making great contributions to the translation and accessibility of Buddhist scriptures.[33]

With monks frequently travelling between the Western Regions and China, Buddhist cave arts also began to take root in the Hexi Corridor of modern-day Gansu. The earliest grottoes in the Mogao Caves of Dunhuang were carved in the Former Liang. Later on, work on the Maijishan Grottoes in Tianshui first took place during the Later Qin, while the Bingling Grottoes in Yongjing County were started during the Western Qin. Numerous other grottoes were built in the Hexi Corridor under the Northern Liang such as the Tiantishan Caves.[34]

Taoism was less prevalent among the Sixteen Kingdoms but was nonetheless absorbed through Chinese rituals and customs. A notable exception was the Cheng-Han, which was partly influenced by the Way of the Celestial Masters as most of the population of Sichuan, including the ruling Li clan, were followers of the school. A Taoist sage from the sect, Fan Changsheng, was appointed as the state's first Prime Minister and given the title of Grand Preceptor of Heaven and Earth.[35] Taoism would only regain its prominence in northern China during the reforms of Kou Qianzhi (365–448) under the Northern Wei, who reenvisioned the Way of the Celestial Masters by incorporating many Buddhist precepts and rituals that were prevalent at the time.

See also

edit

References

edit

Notes

edit
  1. 1 2 The directional prefixes (Former, Later, Northern, Southern, Western) are retroactive historiographical labels used to distinguish kingdoms that shared the same dynastic name. Each kingdom simply called itself by the dynastic name alone (e.g. "Yan", "Qin", "Liang") during its existence.
  2. The state was originally named "Cheng" (成) or "Dacheng" (大成, "Great Cheng") by its founder Li Xiong in 304. In 338, Li Shou seized the throne from Li Xiong's line and renamed the state "Han" (漢) to distance himself from his predecessors and invoke the prestige of the Han dynasty. Historiographers combine the two periods under the label "Cheng-Han" (成漢). Cheng-Han was the earliest established of the Sixteen Kingdoms.
  3. Li Te declared a new era name in 303, which some scholars consider the founding act. The more commonly accepted founding year is 304, when Li Xiong claimed the title of King of Chengdu.
  4. Li Te is sometimes counted as the de facto first ruler, but he never claimed a royal or imperial title. He died in battle in 303 before the state was formally proclaimed.
  5. Liu Yuan founded the state in 304 as "Han" (漢), invoking a claimed descent from the Han dynasty through a marriage between Modu Chanyu and a Han princess. In 319, after Jin Zhun's coup devastated the imperial Liu clan, Liu Yao moved the capital to Chang'an, renounced the Han lineage, and renamed the state "Zhao" (趙), tracing legitimacy to Modu Chanyu. He chose "Zhao" because his earlier title was Prince of Zhongshan, which lay in the territory of the ancient State of Zhao. Because Shi Le also named his breakaway state "Zhao" the same year, historians later distinguished the two as "Former Zhao" (前趙) and "Later Zhao" (後趙).
  6. Liu Yuan declared independence from the Western Jin and proclaimed himself Prince of Han in 304. The state is sometimes dated from 308, when Liu Yuan claimed the imperial title.
  7. Zhang Gui was appointed governor of Liangzhou by the Western Jin in 301. After the fall of the Western Jin in 316, the Zhang family continued to use Emperor Min's Jianxing (建興) era name rather than adopting Eastern Jin era names, marking their de facto independence by 317. In 323, Zhang Mao accepted the title "Prince of Liang" (涼王) from the Former Zhao, acknowledging its suzerainty. After Former Zhao's fall in 329, the Former Liang reverted to nominal Eastern Jin allegiance. In 345, Zhang Jun self-styled as "Acting Prince of Liang" (假涼王) and established a full independent bureaucracy. In 354–355, Zhang Zuo briefly claimed the imperial title, the only Former Liang ruler to do so.
  8. The Later Yan ended through an internal coup: Gao Yun, a Murong adoptee of Goguryeo descent, overthrew the last Murong ruler in 407 and founded the Northern Yan.
  9. Yao Chang initially based himself at Beidi (Yaoxian, Shaanxi) from 384 before capturing Chang'an in 386 and making it his capital.
  10. The Western Qin was conquered by the Later Qin in 400, ending its first period. It was reestablished by Qifu Chipan in 409 after the Later Qin weakened.
  11. After the Northern Wei conquered the Northern Liang in 439, Juqu Wuhui and other members of the Juqu clan fled west and established a rump state at Gaochang (near modern Turpan, Xinjiang), known as the Northern Liang of Gaochang (442–460). This remnant was eventually destroyed by the Rouran Khaganate in 460.
  12. The Northern Liang was founded by the Han Chinese Duan Ye with the support of the Lushuihu Xiongnu chieftain Juqu Mengxun. In 401, Juqu Mengxun deposed and killed Duan Ye and seized control of the kingdom. From 401 onward, the ruling house was Xiongnu (Lushuihu).
  13. The Northern Yan was founded by Gao Yun, who was of Goguryeo descent but had been adopted into the Murong clan. After his assassination in 409, the throne passed to Feng Ba, who was Han Chinese. The ruling Feng family remained Han Chinese for the rest of the kingdom's existence.
  14. Dai was later revived in 386 by Tuoba Gui as the Northern Wei, which went on to reunify all of northern China by 439. The Northern Wei is not counted among the Sixteen Kingdoms because it was still in power when the historian Cui Hong compiled his annals.
  15. The Western Yan experienced extreme political instability, with seven rulers in its first two years. Murong Yong (386–394) was the only ruler to hold power for an extended period.
  16. Chouchi had multiple periods of existence with interruptions. The first Chouchi polity (296–371) was destroyed by the Former Qin. It was restored in 385 during the Former Qin's collapse and continued in various forms until the 6th century, well beyond the conventional end of the Sixteen Kingdoms period.
  17. Historians add the founder's clan name "Duan" to distinguish this short-lived regime, which called itself simply "Qi" (齊), from other states of the same name.
  18. The Tuyuhun polity had three distinct phases. Murong Tuyuhun, an older brother of Former Yan founder Murong Hui, led approximately 1,700 households of Xianbei west from Liaodong beginning c. 285 and settled near Fuhan (Linxia, Gansu) by c. 313. This was a tribal migration, not yet a state. In 329, Murong Tuyuhun's grandson Ye Yan formally established a polity: he set up the Mukechuan headquarters in modern Guinan County, Qinghai, appointed Chinese-style officials (sima and changshi), and adopted "Tuyuhun" as both the clan surname and the state title (國號). In 371, under his son Suixi, the Tuyuhun submitted to the Former Qin and was given the title Marquis of Qiangchuan. After the Former Qin's collapse following the Battle of Fei River (383), successive Tuyuhun leaders Shilian and Shipí became intermittent vassals of the Western Qin, accepting the title King of Bailan (白蘭王). In 390, Shipí rejected this title and attempted to assert independence, but was defeated by Western Qin at Duzhouchuan in 398 and forced to retreat, pay tribute and surrender a hostage. The kingdom was fully re-established in 405 when Shuluogan assumed the titles Grand Commander-in-Chief (大都督), Grand Chanyu (大單于) and King of Tuyuhun (吐谷渾王). Thereafter the Tuyuhun pursued a dual-submission diplomacy, simultaneously accepting titles from the Northern Wei and the Liu Song dynasty to the south, leveraging their control of the western Silk Road routes.
  19. Combined duration of the two periods of independence (329–371 and 405–663), excluding the period of vassalage to the Former Qin and Western Qin.
  20. Murong Tuyuhun (d. 317) was the eponymous ancestor who led the westward migration, but the formal state with a declared state title (國號) and administrative structure was established by his grandson Ye Yan in 329.
  21. Tuoba Gui initially restored his family's state as the Kingdom of Dai in early 386, but renamed it Wei (魏) later that year to signal imperial ambition beyond the Tuoba's ancestral frontier. The name invoked Cao Wei, which had ruled northern China from Ye during the Three Kingdoms. The Northern Wei unified northern China in 439, ending the Sixteen Kingdoms period. It is not counted among the Sixteen Kingdoms because it was still in power when the historian Cui Hong compiled his annals.
  22. The Northern Wei did not fall to an external conqueror. In 534, a power struggle between rival generals Gao Huan and Yuwen Tai split the dynasty into the Eastern Wei (534–550) based at Ye and the Western Wei (535–556) based at Chang'an. These were succeeded by the Northern Qi and Northern Zhou respectively.

Citations

edit
  1. (Chinese) 许红梅, "'汉匈奴归义亲汉张' 印考释" 行知部落 xzbu.com Accessed 2020-06-02
  2. (Chinese) 环首铁刀, CCTV.com Accessed 2020-06-02]
  3. Cosmo, Nicola di (2009), Military Culture in Imperial China, Harvard University Press, p. 104
  4. Graff 2003, p. 48.
  5. Crespigny, Rafe de (1 January 1991). "Three Kingdoms and Western Jin: A History of China in the Third Century AD, The". East Asian History: 157–159.
  6. Jacques Gernet (1996). A History of Chinese Civilization (illustrated, reprint, revised ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 180. ISBN 0521497817.
  7. Kleeman 1998, p. 5.
  8. Grousset, Rene (1970). The Empire of the Steppes. Rutgers University Press. pp. 56. ISBN 0-8135-1304-9.
  9. "Buddha dated 338". searchcollection.asianart.org. Retrieved 8 December 2025.
  10. 1 2 Zürcher 2007, pp. 181–183.
  11. Declercq, Dominik, ed. (2025). A Prince of Martial Splendour in the Sixteen Kingdoms: Li Hao (351-417), Ruler of Western Liang. Asian Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2025. Leiden Boston: Brill. pp. 63–70. ISBN 978-90-04-72738-0.
  12. Schreiber, Gerhard (1949). "The History of the Former Yen Dynasty: 前 燕 (285–370)". Monumenta Serica. 14 (1): 374–480. doi:10.1080/02549948.1949.11730940. ISSN 0254-9948.
  13. Dien, Albert E. (1986). "The Stirrup and Its Effect on Chinese Military History". Ars Orientalis. 16: 33–56. ISSN 0571-1371.
  14. Schreiber, Gerhard (1956). "The History of the Former Yen Dynasty 前燕 (285–370): PART II. Continued from Monumenia Sercia , Vol. XIV., pp. 374–480". Monumenta Serica. 15 (1): 1–141. doi:10.1080/02549948.1956.11730946. ISSN 0254-9948.
  15. Rogers 1968, pp. 111–118.
  16. Rogers 1968, pp. 125–141.
  17. Rogers 1968, pp. 166–171.
  18. Hinton, David, ed. (2008). Classical Chinese poetry: an anthology (1st ed.). New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-374-10536-5.
  19. Graff 2003, p. 69.
  20. Mou, Zhongjian (1 January 2023). A Brief History of the Relationship Between Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism. Springer Nature. pp. 186–188. ISBN 978-981-19-7206-5.
  21. Lü 1948, pp. 247–250.
  22. Graff 2003, pp. 70–71.
  23. Lü 1948, p. 263.
  24. Lü 1948, pp. 266–271.
  25. Puning Liu (2020). China's Northern Wei Dynasty, 386–535: The Struggle for Legitimacy. Routledge. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9781000283143.
  26. Li and Zheng, p. 391
  27. Graff 2003, p. 122.
  28. Kleeman 1998, pp. 206–207.
  29. Wu, Honglin (2013). "King, Heavenly King, Emperor—A Study of the Titles of Leaders of Various Regimes during the Sixteen Kingdoms Period" 王、天王、皇帝 ——十六国时期各政权首领名号研究. Northwest Ethnology Series. 9.
  30. Xiao, Congrong; Zhang, Yan; Seong, Dongkwon (26 May 2025). "Analysis of the Multinational Policies of the Han-Zhao State in Ancient China". Genealogy. 9 (2): 57. doi:10.3390/genealogy9020057. ISSN 2313-5778.
  31. Han, Di (September 2001). "The Title of Chan Yu in the Sixteen Minority States in North China During 304-439" 十六国时期的“单于”制度. Journal of Inner Mongolia University (Humanities and Social Sciences). 33 (5).
  32. Chen, Jinhua (2004). "The Indian Buddhist Missionary Dharmaksema (385-433): A New Dating of his Arrival in Guzang and of his Translations". T'oung Pao. 90 (4): 215–263. doi:10.1163/1568532043628340. ISSN 0082-5433.
  33. Chen, Jinhua; Kuan, Guang; Faxian, eds. (2020). From Xiangyuan to Ceylon: the life and legacy of the Chinese monk Faxian (337-422). Singapore: World Scholastic Publishers. pp. 122–123. ISBN 978-981-14-5737-1.
  34. Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman (31 December 2017). Knapp, Ronald G.; Ruan, Xing (eds.). Chinese Architecture in an Age of Turmoil, 200-600. University of Hawaii Press. doi:10.1515/9780824838232. ISBN 978-0-8248-3823-2.
  35. Kleeman 1998, pp. 82–84.

Sources

edit
  • Spring and Autumn Annals of the Sixteen Kingdoms
  • Lü, Simian (1948). A History of Jin, Northern and Southern Dynasties 两晋南北朝史, vol. 1, Shanghai: Kaiming Press.
  • Rogers, Michael C. (1968). "The Chronicle of Fu Chien: A Case of Exemplar History", Chinese Dynastic Histories Translations, no. 10, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Kleeman, Terry F. (1998). Great Perfection: Religion and ethnicity in a Chinese millennial kingdom. Honolulu (T.H.): University of Hawai'i Press, ISBN 978-0-8248-1800-5.
  • Li Bo; Zheng Yin (2001). "5000 years of Chinese history", Inner Mongolian People's Publishing Corp., ISBN 7-204-04420-7.
  • Graff, David (2003). Medieval Chinese Warfare 300–900. Routledge, ISBN 1134553536.
  • Zürcher, E. (2007). The Buddhist conquest of China: the spread and adaptation of Buddhism in early medieval China. Sinica Leidensia (3rd ed.). Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15604-3.