China’s Three Kingdoms period, part of a…
280 CE
China’s Three Kingdoms period, part of a period of disunity called the Six Dynasties following immediately the loss of de facto power of the Han Dynasty emperors, refers in a strict academic sense to the period between the foundation of the state of Wei in 220 and the conquest of the state of Wu by the Jin Dynasty in 280.
However, many Chinese historians and laymen extend the starting point of this period back to the uprising of the Yellow Turbans in 184.
To help further distinguish these states from other historical Chinese states of the same name, historians add a relevant character: Wei is also known as Cáo Wèi, Shu is also known as Shu Hàn, and Wu is also known as Dong Wu or Eastern Wu.
The term Three Kingdoms itself is somewhat of a mistranslation, since each state was eventually headed not by kings, but by an emperor who claimed legitimate succession from the Han Dynasty.
Although the translation Three Empires is more contextually accurate, the term Three Kingdoms has become standard among sinologists.
During the decline of the Han dynasty, the region of Wu—a region in the south of the Yangtze River surrounding Nanjing—had been under the control of the warlord Sun Quan.
Sun Quan had succeeded his brother Sun Ce as the lord over the Wu region, paying nominal allegiance to Emperor Xian of Han (who was, at that point, under the control of Cao Cao).
Unlike his competitors, he did not really have the ambition to be Emperor of China.
However, after Cao Pi of Cao Wei and Liu Bei of the Shu Han each declared themselves to be the Emperor, Sun Quan had decided to follow suit in 229, claiming to have founded the Wu Dynasty.
Sun Quan's long reign had resulted in the stabilizing of the south.
Wu and Shu had formed a military alliance, to defeat Wei in the north.
Wu has never managed to gain territory north of the Yangtze river, but Wei had never managed to take territory south of the river.
Eastern Wu, the longest-lived of the three kingdoms, is finally conquered by the first Jin emperor, Sima Yan, in 280.
The Three Kingdoms period has been one of the bloodiest in Chinese history.
A population census in late Eastern Han Dynasty had reported a population of approximately fifty million, while a population census in the early Western Jin Dynasty (after Jin has reunified China) reports a population of approximately sixteen million.
However, as the Jin dynasty's census is far less complete than the Han census, these figures are in question.
Even after taking into account possible inaccuracies of these census reports, a large percentage of the population had been wiped out during the constant wars waged during this period.
Technology has advanced significantly during this period.
Zhuge Liang, the Chancellor of Shu Han whose name is synonymous with wisdom in the Chinese language, is believed to have been the inventor of the mantou or Chinese steamed bun, the land mine and a mysterious, efficient automatic transportation device (initially used for grain) described as a "wooden ox and floating horse", which is sometimes identified with the wheelbarrow.
A brilliant mechanical engineer known as Ma Jun, in the Kingdom of Wei, considered by many to be as brilliant as his predecessor Zhang Heng, had invented a hydraulic-powered, mechanical puppet theater designed for Emperor Ming of Wei (Cao Rui), square-pallet chain pumps for irrigation of gardens in Luoyang, and the ingenious design of the South Pointing Chariot, a nonmagnetic directional compass operated by differential gears.