Jing Ke
Jing Ke (Chinese: 荊軻; died 227 BC) was a retainer and assassin from the ancient Chinese state of Yan during the Warring States period, renowned for his audacious but ultimately failed attempt to assassinate Ying Zheng, the King of Qin who later unified China as Qin Shi Huang.[1]
Dispatched by Crown Prince Dan of Yan to avert Qin's encroaching conquests, Jing Ke traveled to the Qin capital with a forged map of Yan territory concealing a poisoned dagger and the severed head of a defected Qin general, Fan Yuqi, as a supposed peace offering.[2] The plot, preserved primarily in Sima Qian's Shiji (Records of the Grand Historian), a foundational Han dynasty text compiled over a century later, recounts how Jing Ke gained an audience but faltered when the dagger stuck in its sheath during the strike, allowing the king to evade and summon guards, resulting in the assassin's dismemberment.[3]
This incident, while a tactical failure, accelerated Qin's invasion and subjugation of Yan, contributing to the dynasty's path toward imperial unification, and has since cemented Jing Ke's legacy as a symbol of desperate heroism in Chinese lore, inspiring poetry, opera, and debate over his motives as patriot or reckless actor.[4][5]