Duke Ligong of Qin explained

Duke Ligong of Qin
秦厲共公
Succession:Ruler of Qin
Reign:476–443 BC
Predecessor:Duke Dao of Qin
Successor:Duke Zao of Qin
House:Ying
Dynasty:Qin
Father:Duke Dao of Qin
Issue:Duke Zao of Qin
Duke Huai of Qin
Death Date:443 BC
Posthumous Name:Duke Ligong (厲共公)
or
Duke Ligong (利龔公)
or
Duke Lagong (剌龔公)
or
Duke Li (厲公)

Duke Ligong of Qin (; died 443 BC), personal name unknown, was a duke of the Qin state, reigning from 476 to 443 BC. Duke Ligong succeeded his father Duke Dao, who died in 477 BC, as ruler of Qin.[1] [2]

In 461 BC, Duke Ligong dispatched an army of 20,000 men to attack the Rong state of Dali (in present-day Dali County, Shaanxi), and captured its capital.[1] [2]

In 456 BC, the Jin state attacked Qin, taking the city of Wucheng (武城, in present-day Hua County, Shaanxi).[1] [2]

In 453 BC, the Zhao, Han, and Wei clans of Jin jointly attacked Zhi, the most powerful of Jin's four major clans, killed its leader Zhi Yao, and divided the territory of Zhi amongst themselves. The state of Jin was effectively partitioned into three new states. Some of the survivors of the Zhi clan fled to Qin.[1] [2]

In 444 BC, Qin attacked Yiqu (in present-day Ning County, Gansu), another Rong state, and captured its king.[1] [2]

Duke Ligong reigned for 34 years and died in 443 BC. He was succeeded by his son Duke Zao.[1] [2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: http://www.guoxue.com/shibu/24shi/shiji/sj_005.htm . zh:秦本纪 . Annals of Qin . . Sima Qian . Sima Qian . Chinese . guoxue.com . 1 May 2012.
  2. Book: Annotated Shiji . Han, Zhaoqi . 2010 . Zhonghua Book Company . 978-7-101-07272-3 . Chinese . Annals of Qin . 410–413.