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Duke Qing of Jin

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Ruler of the Chinese state of Jin from 525 BC to 512 BC
Duke Qing of Jin
晉頃公
Duke of Jin
Reign525–512 BC
PredecessorDuke Zhao
SuccessorDuke Ding
Died512 BC
IssueDuke Ding
Names
Ancestral name: (姬)
Given name: Qùjí (去疾) or Qìjí (棄疾)
Posthumous name
Duke Qing (頃公)
HouseJi
DynastyJin
FatherDuke Zhao

Duke Qing of Jin (Chinese: 晉頃公; pinyin: Jìn Qǐng Gōng), personal name Ji Quji or Ji Qiji, was the ruler of the Jin state from 525 BC to 512 BC. He succeeded his father, Duke Zhao, who died in 526 BC.

In 520 BC, King Jing of Zhou died. The king's three sons – Crown Prince Gai, Prince Meng, and Prince Chao – fought each other for the Zhou throne. Jin's six major clans—Han (韓), Zhao (趙), Wei (魏), Fan (范), Zhonghang (中行), and Zhi (智)—intervened and assisted Crown Prince Gai ascend the Zhou throne.

In 514 BC, two smaller clans—Qi (祁) and Yangshe (羊舌)—were exterminated and the six major clans grew even more powerful.

Duke Qing reigned for 14 years and died in 512 BC. He was succeeded by his son, Duke Ding.

References

  1. ^ Sima Qian. 晉世家 [House of Jin]. Records of the Grand Historian (in Chinese). Retrieved 12 April 2012.
Duke Qing of Jin House of JiCadet branch of the House of Ji Died: 512 BC
Regnal titles
Preceded byDuke Zhao of Jin Duke of Jin
525–512 BC
Succeeded byDuke Ding of Jin
Monarchs of Jin
United period
Divided period
Marquis of Jin
Rulers of Quwo
Reunited period
After Partition
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