Xi'e

Xi'e (Chinese: 西鄂, p Xī'è) was a region of ancient China in present-day Henan and Hubei. Under the Qin and Han dynasties and during the Three Kingdoms period, Xi'e County (t 西鄂縣, s 西鄂县, Xī'èxiàn) was also a county in the Nanyang Commandery.

Name

Xi'e (lit. "Western E") took its name from the E, a Shang-dynasty vassal state probably originally located in modern Shanxi. The name is now pronounced as a brief, hard schwa (IPA: [ə]), but the ancient pronunciation of the name has been reconstructed as closer to *Ngˤak. Around the time of the Qin, therefore, "Xi'e" would have been pronounced something like *Snˤər Ngˤak.[1][2] By the Jin, it would have been Middle Chinese Ser Ngak.[3]

History

During the Zhou, E was forced to relocate at least twice under pressure from Jin and Chu. Absorbed by Chu in 863 BC, E was adopted as the state's capital by a number of Chu kings prior to their final conquest by Shi Huangdi in 223 BC. Ezhou then became a province under the Qin and Han.

Thereafter, Xi'e was a county in the Nanyang Commandery during the Qin and Han dynasties and the Three Kingdoms period.

Famous residents

It was the birthplace of Zhang Heng (AD78139), a famous Chinese polymath of the Han dynasty. Du Xi served as its chief (西鄂縣) around the end of the 2nd century. Luo Xian (d.270) was proclaimed Marquis of Xi'e (西鄂縣) late in life as part of the creation of the Jin at the end of the Three Kingdoms period.

gollark: But it just blocks webhooks now due to recursion issues/
gollark: ABR has (had?) logic like that.
gollark: We can clearly chat.
gollark: The Discord-side bridge tries to colorize it, your chat bridge doesn't strip it right.
gollark: I rewrote the monitoring bots to use less CPU and not continuously spam #o.

References

  1. Baxter, William & al. "Baxter-Sagart Old Chinese Reconstruction", pp. 99 & 121 Archived April 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. 2011. Accessed 14 November 2013.
  2. For more on the *s- prefix found in this reconstruction of Old Chinese 西, see Sagart, Laurent & al. "Reconstructing the *s- Prefix in Old Chinese". Language and Linguistics, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 2959. 2012. Accessed 14 November 2013.
  3. "Middle Chinese readings for 9000 Guangyun characters in Baxter’s notation", pp. 30 & 133 Archived June 28, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. 2011. Accessed 14 November 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.