Gonghe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article contains Chinese text.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.

The Gonghe (共和) regency ruled China from 841 BC to 828 BC.

According to the Han Dynasty historian Sima Qian (in his Records of the Grand Historian), during the Gonghe regency, the Zhou Dynasty was ruled jointly by two dukes -- the Duke of Zhou (not to be confused with the first and most well-known Duke of Zhou, who must have been his ancestor) and the Duke of Zhao (召公 -- similarly, not to be confused with the first and most well-known Duke of Zhao) after King Li of Zhou was exiled by his nobles for his tyranny. According to the Bamboo Annals, the Gonghe regency was ruled on by a single person -- the Count of Gong (共伯), whose name was He (和).

Note that "Gonghe" corresponds to "republic" in the modern context. The Gonghe period during the Zhou Dynasty does not confer any republican connotations, but 19th century Japanese officials translating Western concepts harked back to the ancient Gonghe period when coining the modern term for "republic" kyowakoku, which is then back-translated through corresponding Han characters to gongheguo in Chinese and gonghwaguk in Korean.

The first year of the Gonghe regency, 841 BC, is highly significant in ancient Chinese history, in that the dates for the rulers prior to the Gonghe regency are not and have never been clearly dated, ever since Sima Qian's time -- as Sima himself found the dates for the rulers prior to the Gongehe regency to be so unreliable that he chose not to adopt them in his work. Only after 841 BC could events in Chinese history be reliably dated. Currently, the government of the People's Republic of China is sponsoring the Xia Shang Zhou Chronology Project, a multidisciplinary project that seeks to give better estimates for dates prior to 841 BC, but the project's draft report, published in 2000, has been criticized by various sources.

Gonghe
Preceded by
Li
Regent of China
841 BC – 828 BC
Succeeded by
Xuan
Languages