Three Qins
The Three Qins (三秦) were a trio of short-lived kingdoms—Yong, Sai, and Di—established by the Chu general Xiang Yu in the Guanzhong region of central China in 206 BCE, shortly after the collapse of the Qin dynasty.[1] These kingdoms, collectively occupying the core territory of the former Qin empire, were enfeoffed to surrendered Qin generals: Zhang Han as King of Yong in the west, Sima Xin as King of Sai in the east, and Dong Yi as King of Di in the north.[1][2] Xiang Yu's division aimed to fragment control over this strategically vital area, rewarding allies while preventing any single power from dominating the heartland and serving as a bulwark against rivals like Liu Bang, whom he had relegated to the distant Hanzhong region.[1] This arrangement formed part of Xiang Yu's broader partitioning of the conquered Qin lands into the Eighteen Kingdoms, a feudal system intended to consolidate his hegemony as the "Overlord of Western Chu."[1] However, the Three Qins proved unstable, lacking deep loyalty among the puppet rulers and facing immediate threats from Liu Bang's Han forces. In late 206 BCE, Liu Bang launched the campaign to "pacify the Three Qins" (还定三秦), employing deception such as feigned repairs to the burned plank roads while secretly advancing through Chencang Pass, rapidly defeating the divided kings—Zhang Han surrendered after initial resistance, Sima Xin submitted without battle, and Dong Yi was killed in combat—securing Guanzhong by mid-205 BCE.[3] This conquest provided Liu Bang with a stable base, resources, and legitimacy as the restorer of order in the Qin homeland, pivotal to his eventual victory in the Chu-Han Contention and founding of the Han dynasty.[3] The term "Three Qins" endures as a historical and cultural designation for Shaanxi Province, reflecting the region's enduring association with this transitional episode that bridged the autocratic Qin empire and the imperial Han order.[2] Primary accounts derive from Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), which details the events through biographies of key figures like Xiang Yu and Liu Bang, emphasizing strategic miscalculations and the causal role of fragmented authority in Xiang Yu's downfall.Historical Context
Fall of the Qin Dynasty
The death of Qin Shi Huang in 210 BCE precipitated the dynasty's collapse, as his passing exposed vulnerabilities in succession and governance. While touring eastern China, the emperor succumbed to illness—possibly exacerbated by mercury ingestion from immortality elixirs—and his aides, including eunuch Zhao Gao and chancellor Li Si, concealed the body for over a month using fish carts to disguise decomposition odors before returning to the capital. They suppressed the designated heir Fusu by forging an edict compelling his suicide at the frontier and enthroned the less capable younger son Huhai as Qin Er Shi, consolidating power through Legalist manipulations. Er Shi's reign intensified the dynasty's harsh policies, including exorbitant taxes, extensive corvée labor for fortifications like the Great Wall extensions and the emperor's mausoleum, and brutal suppression of dissent, which eroded loyalty among peasants, officials, and even the military.[4] These burdens, compounded by natural disasters and administrative corruption, fueled widespread resentment. In July 209 BCE, conscript soldiers Chen Sheng and Wu Guang, delayed by heavy rains while marching to garrison against northern nomads, anticipated execution for tardiness under Qin's strict laws and instead revolted, slaying their overseers and mobilizing locals with the rallying cry that even kings and nobles originated from common stock.[4] Proclaiming allegiance to the extinct Chu state, their Dazexiang Uprising ignited a cascade of rebellions, drawing in disaffected nobles, peasants, and opportunistic warlords who formed armies and seized territories across the empire.[4] Qin's military response, led by generals like Zhang Han, initially quelled several insurgencies through superior organization and numbers, but faltered decisively in 207 BCE at the Battle of Julu, where Chu rebel Xiang Yu relieved a besieged allied force by breaking dikes to flood Qin positions, drowning tens of thousands and prompting mass defections from the demoralized imperial army. Concurrently, palace intrigues escalated: Zhao Gao, testing loyalties by insisting a deer was a horse, orchestrated purges of disloyal ministers, then compelled Er Shi's suicide in July 207 BCE and installed his nephew Ziying as a puppet ruler, only for Ziying to retaliate by executing Zhao Gao shortly thereafter.[4] With rebel forces converging, Liu Bang's army breached the weakened defenses and entered the capital Xianyang in October 207 BCE, prompting Ziying's unconditional surrender and the abdication of imperial seals, signifying the cessation of centralized Qin authority.[5] Xiang Yu's subsequent arrival in early 206 BCE led to Ziying's execution along with the Qin royal lineage, the looting and incineration of the Afang Palace and epang records, and the partition of Qin lands among victorious rebels, formally dissolving the dynasty after a mere 15 years of rule.[4]Xiang Yu's Division of China
Following the surrender of the Qin forces under Zhang Han after the Battle of Julu in 207 BC and the subsequent massacres at Xin'an and the destruction of Xianyang's palaces, Xiang Yu consolidated control over the former Qin territories. In spring 206 BC, he formalized a partition of the empire into eighteen regional kingdoms, ostensibly to reward allied rebel leaders and former Qin defectors while maintaining his own supremacy as Hegemon-King of Western Chu, encompassing nine eastern counties centered on his native Chu homeland. This feudal-like structure rejected centralized imperial rule, reverting to a hegemonic system where Xiang Yu acted as overlord, but it fragmented authority and invited rivalry, as territories were allocated based on military loyalty rather than administrative viability.[1] Xiang Yu's unwillingness to govern the Guanzhong plain—the strategic heartland of the former Qin dynasty, known for its fertile loess soil and defensible passes—led him to entrust it to three generals who had surrendered to him post-Julu: Zhang Han, appointed King of Yong with lands west of Xianyang; Sima Xin, King of Sai governing the area between Xianyang and the Yellow River; and Dong Yi, King of Di controlling northern territories around modern Yan'an. Collectively termed the Three Qins, these assignments aimed to buffer Xiang Yu's eastern domains from unrest but relied on potentially disloyal Qin remnants, whose familiarity with local defenses and resentment toward Chu occupiers undermined stability. Liu Bang, despite his earlier capture of Xianyang, was sidelined as King of Han with a peripheral territory south of the Qinling Mountains, including Hanzhong, Ba, and Shu—poorer, mountainous regions that constrained his forces.[1][6] The broader division extended to other warlords, such as Wu Rui as King of Hengshan in the middle Yangtze, Ying Bu in Jiujiang, and Zhang Er in Zhao, creating a patchwork of states from Liaodong to Shu that prioritized short-term pacification over long-term cohesion. Xiang Yu's execution of the puppet Emperor Yi of Chu and relocation of the Qin royal clan to Chu for elimination further centralized nominal authority under himself, yet the proliferation of kings—many with overlapping claims or inadequate resources—fostered betrayals and rebellions, setting the stage for the Chu-Han Contention. This partition, while militarily pragmatic in distributing garrisons, ignored the logistical challenges of governing disparate regions without a unified command, as evidenced by rapid defections among appointees like Wei Bao and Han Cheng.[1][6]Establishment of the Three Qins
Territorial Divisions and Rulers
In early 206 BC, following the Qin dynasty's collapse, Xiang Yu divided the strategic Guanzhong region—the Wei River valley and former Qin heartland—into three kingdoms known as the Three Qins to consolidate control and block potential incursions from Liu Bang's forces in Hanzhong.[7] These kingdoms were awarded to Qin generals who had surrendered during the rebellion: Zhang Han, Sima Xin, and Dong Yi.[7] The division aimed to fragment authority in this fertile, defensible area encompassing modern central and western Shaanxi province, preventing any single power from dominating the passes to the east.[7] The specific territorial allocations were as follows:| Kingdom | Ruler | Territory Description | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yong | Zhang Han | Western Guanzhong, west of Xianyang | Feiqiu |
| Sai | Sima Xin | Central to eastern Guanzhong, from Xianyang to the Yellow River bend | Yueyang |
| Zhai (Di) | Dong Yi | Northern areas including Shang commandery | Gaonu |