Zhong Kang
Zhong Kang | |
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Parent(s) | Qi of Xia |
Relatives |
Tai Kang (brother) Yu the Great (grandfather) Xiang of Xia (son) |
Zhong Kang (Chinese: 仲康) was the fourth king of the possibly legendary Xia Dynasty.
Family
Zhong Kang was a son of King Qi of Xia and thus the younger brother of Tai Kang.[1]
Reign
According to the Bamboo Annals, Zhong Kang took the throne in the year of Jichou (己丑). His capital was at Zhenxun.
On the day of Gengwu, the 9th month in the 5th year of his reign, there was a solar eclipse. Since the royal astronomers at that time had grown degenerate in licentiousness and drunkenness, they failed to predict this eclipse, resulting in confusion and panic among the common people. Zhong Kang sent the nobleman Yin to punish the Ministers of Astronomy for thus neglecting their duties. This is described more fully in the document known as the Punitive Expedition of Yin.
In the 6th year of Zhong Kang's reign, he appointed the prince of Kunwu (昆吾) as his prime minister.
In his 7th year he died, and his son, named Xiang, declared a new capital at Shangqiu, supported by the prince of Pi.
Sources
- ↑ The Shape of the Turtle: Myth, Art, and Cosmos in Early China by Sarah Allan
Zhong Kang | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by Tai Kang |
King of China 2088 BC – 2075 BC |
Succeeded by Xiang |
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