释义 |
- Chinese royalty Zhou dynasty Qin dynasty Sixteen Kingdoms Southern and Northern Dynasties Sui dynasty Tang dynasty Song dynasty Ming dynasty
- Games
- See also
Qin Wang (秦王, King/Prince of Qin or King/Prince Qin) may refer to: {{TOC right}}Chinese royaltyZhou dynasty- King Huiwen of Qin, ruled 338 BC – 311 BC, son of Duke Xiao of Qin.
- King Wu of Qin, ruled 310 BC – 307 BC
- King Zhaoxiang of Qin, ruled 306 BC – 250 BC
- King Xiaowen of Qin, ruled 250 BC – 249 BC
- King Zhuangxiang of Qin, ruled 249 BC – 247 BC, father of Qin Shi Huang.
Qin dynasty- Qin Shi Huang, ruled 246 BC – 221 BC as King of Qin before declaring as First Emperor.
- Fusu, first son of Qin Shi Huang who committed suicide.
- Ziying, claimed the reduced title King of Qin prior to the collapse of Qin dynasty.
Sixteen Kingdoms- Fu Hong, self-proclaimed to be the Prince of Three Qins.
- Fú Jiàn, founding emperor of the Former Qin state.
- Yao Chang, self-proclaimed to be the Prince 10,000 Years of Qin.
- Qifu Guoren, founding prince of the Western Qin state.
- Qifu Gangui, second prince of the Western Qin state.
- Qifu Chipan, third prince of the Western Qin state.
- Qifu Mumo, last prince of the Western Qin state.
Southern and Northern Dynasties- Helian Chang, created in 430, former ruler of the Xia state.
Sui dynasty- Yang Jun (prince) (died 600), third son of Emperor Yang of Sui.
- Yang Hao (prince) (died 618), puppet prince for Yuwen Huaji.
Tang dynasty- Emperor Taizong of Tang, second emperor of Tang dynasty.
Song dynasty- Qian Chu (posthumously), former king of Wuyue.
- Zhao Defang ({{zh|c=趙德芳}}), fourth son of Emperor Taizu of Song.
Ming dynasty{{main|Prince of Qin of Ming dynasty}}- Zhu Shuang (1356–1395), second son of the Hongwu Emperor.
Games- Prince of Qin (video game)
See also- Qin (state)
- Qin dynasty
- Former Qin
- Later Qin
- Western Qin
- Three Qins
{{disambiguation}} 2 : Qin dynasty|Chinese princes |