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Yin Kingdom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rebel state in 10th-century China
For the Yin state ruled by the Zi clan, seeShang dynasty.
Great Yin
大殷
943–945
Map of Yin, 943
Map of Yin, 943
Map of Yin, early 945
Map of Yin, early 945
StatusMonarchy
CapitalJian Prefecture (modernJian'ou)
Common languagesMiddle Chinese
Medieval Min
GovernmentMonarchy
Emperor 
• 943–945
Wang Yanzheng
Historical eraFive Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period
• Rebellion against Min by Wang Yanzheng
943
• Territory re-incorporated into Min
945
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Min
Min
Today part ofChina

Yin (Chinese:;pinyin:Yīn), officially theGreat Yin (大殷), was a short-liveddynastic state of China from 943 to 945 in the region ofFujian. It existed during theFive Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, but was not counted among the 15 regimes. Yin's only emperor wasWang Yanzheng, a member of the ruling clan of theMin state. After Wang Yanzheng took the Min throne in 945, Yin's territory was re-incorporated into Min, ending its existence as a separate polity. Soon after, the Min state was conquered by theSouthern Tang dynasty.

Rebellion from Min

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TheMin Kingdom was founded in 909 after theTang dynasty collapsed. However, after the founder of the kingdom,Wang Shenzhi, died in 925, the sons squabbled with one another. In 943, that led to an all out rebellion as one of Wang Shenzhi's sons,Wang Yanzheng, rebelled and carved out the Yin Kingdom out of the northwestern part of the Min Kingdom.

Territorial extent

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The Yin Kingdom was rather small, occupying an area in present-day northernFujian and southernZhejiang. It was bounded byWuyue to the north,Min to the south and east, and theSouthern Tang to the west.

End of Yin as separate entity

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In 944, Wang Yanzheng's brother and rival as the Emperor of Min,Wang Yanxi, was assassinated. Wang Yanxi's generalZhu Wenjin claimed the Min throne. In 945, Zhu was assassinated, and his army pledged allegiance to Wang Yanzheng as the Emperor of Min and asked him to return to the Min capitalChangle. Wang Yanzheng claimed the Min throne, ending Yin's existence as a separate state, but did not return to Changle; rather, he remained at his base ofJian Prefecture, whichSouthern Tang besieged later in the year, forcing his surrender.[1][2]

Ruler

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Emperor of Yin
Temple namePosthumous namePersonal namePeriod of reignEra name
Did not existPrince Gongyi of Fu (福恭懿王)Wang Yanzheng943–945Tiande (天德) (943–945)

References

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  1. ^Zizhi Tongjian,vol. 284.
  2. ^Zizhi Tongjian,vol. 285.
  • Mote, F.W. (1999).Imperial China (900–1800). Harvard University Press. pp. 11, 16.ISBN 978-0-674-01212-7.
Five Dynasties
Ten Kingdoms (Ten States)
Other states
De facto independent entities
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