Zhu of Xia
Zhu (Chinese: 杼, also 予, 宁, 佇, or 宇) was the seventh king of the semi-legendary Xia dynasty (c. 2070–1600 BCE) of Ancient China. Along with the reign of his father Shao Kang, Zhu's rule was considered a peaceful and prosperous period of the Xia's history. BackgroundThe Xia dynasty (夏朝; c. 2070–1600 BCE) is the first dynasty of traditional Chinese historiography.[1] Founded by Yu the Great, both the dynasty and its rulers are of highly uncertain and controversial historicity.[1][2] There is some uncertainty as to the correct character for Zhu's name.[3] Some sources refer to him as Yu (予).[4] According to Sima Zhen, his named is read "Zhù". Traditional narrativeExtant sources offer little information on Zhu's reign.[5] He was the son of Shao Kang.[6][7] According to the Zuo Zhuan, Shao Kang's wife—and presumably Zhu's mother—was a daughter of Yu Si , a descendant of the legendary Yu dynasty.[8] Shao Kang had been born during an interregnum in the Xia's history, when the region was ruled by the usurper Han Zhuo.[5] During Shao Kang's attack to restore the throne, the Zuo Zhuan described Zhu as commanding a "diversionary force" at the rear.[9] Towards his reign's end, Shao Kang enfeoffed his son Wuyu with a fief near Kuaiji; the sinologist Wu Kuo-Chen speculates that a rivalry from Wuyu living under the heir Zhu "might have grown into bickering that could be resolved only by this settlement".[10] The Bamboo Annals gives a brief account of Zhu's reign. He ascended in the year of the ji si (己巳) and resided in Yuan (原; now Jiyuan), moving the capital to Laoqiu (老丘; now Kaifeng) after five years. During his reign's eighth year Zhu undertook a punitive expedition in the East China Sea, conquering as far as Sanshou. While hunting amid the exhibition, Zhu killed a nine-tailed fox. In the thirteenth year his Shang vassal Ming died at He. He died in the seventeenth year of his reign and was succeeded by his son Huai.[6][5] Traditional accounts are generally interpreted as indicating the reigns of Shao Kang and Zhu as a "period of union and tranquillity".[11] Amid the renewed peace and conquering of Eastern peoples, Zhu's reign has been described as "the most powerful and prosperous period of the Xia dynasty."[12] The Guoyu describes Zhu as following Yu the Great's example, a "further indication that this is in some sense a new beginning".[4] ChronologyZhu is traditionally held to have succeeded his father Shao Kang and been succeeded by his son Huai.[7] Aside from this, all reign periods and lengths are speculative and unverifiable.
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