Duke Ping of Chen (Chinese: 陳平公; pinyin: Chén Píng Gōng; reigned 777 BC – died 755 BC), personal name Gui Xie, was a duke of the Chen state.[1]
Duke Ping was a younger son of Duke Wu, who died in 781 BC and was succeeded by his elder son Duke Yi. However, Duke Yi died in 778 BC after only three years of reign, and Duke Ping succeeded his elder brother as the ruler of Chen.[1]
In 771 BC, the seventh year of Duke Ping's reign, the Western Zhou dynasty collapsed after the Quanrong nomads killed King You of Zhou and occupied the Zhou heartland, forcing the Zhou royal court to move east to Luoyang. Duke Ping reigned for 23 years and died in 755 BC. He was succeeded by his son, Yu (Duke Wen).[1]
Taiwanese actress ChenPing (Sun TV) (born 1955), chairman of Sun TV in Hong Kong DukePingofChen (died 755 BC), ruler of the state ofChen Chin Peng (1924–2013)...
years of reign, and was succeeded by his younger brother, Xie (DukePingofChen). Han 2010, pp. 2778–9. Han, Zhaoqi, ed. (2010). "Houses ofChen and Qi"...
Duke Wen ofChen (Chinese: 陳文公; pinyin: Chén Wén Gōng; reigned 754 BC – died 745 BC), personal name Gui Yu, was a monarch of the Chen state. Duke Wen...
Duke Wu ofChen (Chinese: 陳武公; pinyin: Chén Wǔ Gōng; reigned 795 BC – died 781 BC), personal name Gui Ling, was a ruler of the Chen state. Duke Wu succeeded...
was Duke Mu of Qin, but he reigned nearly 100 years earlier than her husband King Pingof Chu, so it is generally accepted that she was a daughter of Duke...
then installed Duke Jian's brother, DukePingof Qi to the throne. Then, the Tian clan became the de facto rulers of Qi. In 391 BCE, Tian Xizi's great-great-grandson...
Marquess of Changcheng to Dukeof Changcheng to Dukeof Yixing to DukeofChen to Prince ofChen. In 557, Xiao Bo declared a resistance against Chen from...
Duke (577–555 BC) Wu, Duke (554–528 BC) Ping, Duke (527–524 BC) Dao, Duke (523–515 BC) Sheng, Duke (514–510 BC) Yin, Duke (509–506 BC) Jing, Duke (505–502...
at Shen (in the State of Chu), but he was disappointed. In 534 BC, the State ofChen suffered internal disorder. Duke Ai ofChen favoured his second son...
major renovation by Taiwan Chief Administrator ChenPing (陳璸), the compound retained its original layout of Wen Miao to the right and Guo Xue to the left...
Emperor Wu ofChen (Chinese: 陳武帝; 503– 9 August 559), personal name Chen Baxian (陳霸先), courtesy name Xingguo (興國), childhood name Fasheng (法生), was the...
two powers. Despite being the nominal overlord, King Pingof Zhou exchanged hostages with Duke Zhuang in an attempt to secure peace, but this only led...
2307/3631778, JSTOR 3631778 Chen Minzhen (陳民鎮); Pines, Yuri (2018). "Where is King Ping? The History and Historiography of the Zhou Dynasty's Eastward...