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Shun dynasty

Chinese dynasty during the Ming–Qing transition (1644–1646)


Chinese dynasty during the Ming–Qing transition (1644–1646)

FieldValue
conventional_long_nameGreat Shun
common_nameShun dynasty
native_name大順
eraTransition from Ming to Qing
statusShort-lived dynasty of China
government_typeMonarchy
year_start1644
year_end1646
event_startCaptured Beijing/Death of the Chongzhen Emperor
date_startApril
event_endSurrender to the Southern Ming
event1Battle of Shanhai Pass
date_event127 May 1644
event2Proclamation as the Yongchang Emperor
date_event23 June 1644
event3Fall of Beijing
date_event35 June 1644
event_preEstablished in Xi'an
date_pre8 February 1644
todayChina
p1Ming dynasty
s1Qing dynasty
s2Southern Ming
image_mapShun-dynasty.png
image_map_captionThe Shun dynasty at its peak in 1644
capitalXi'an
(1644)
Beijing
(1644 – 5 June 1644)
common_languagesChinese
religion
currencyChinese coin, Chinese cash
leader1Li Zicheng
year_leader11644–1645
title_leaderEmperor

(1644) Beijing (1644 – 5 June 1644) The Shun dynasty, officially the Great Shun, also known as Li Shun, was a short-lived dynasty of China that existed during the Ming–Qing transition. The dynasty was founded in Xi'an on 8 February 1644, the first day of the lunar year, by Li Zicheng, the leader of a large peasant rebellion, by proclaiming himself "emperor" (皇帝) instead of the title "king" (王) before founding the dynasty.

The capture of Beijing by the Shun forces in April 1644 marked the end of the Ming dynasty, but Li Zicheng failed to solidify his political and military control, and in late May 1644 he was defeated at the Battle of Shanhai Pass by the joint forces of Ming general Wu Sangui (who had defected to the Qing dynasty), with Manchu prince Dorgon. When he fled back to Beijing in early June, Li finally proclaimed himself the Yongchang Emperor of the Great Shun and left the capital the next day after setting the palace ablaze and ransacking the government offices. He may have intended to resume his Imperial claims later on by proclaiming his accession in the Forbidden City. After the death of the emperor, Shun remnants joined with the Southern Ming in Nanjing, while continuing to refer to Li as their "deceased emperor". The Shun dynasty weakened dramatically after the death of Li Zicheng in 1645. The successors, his brother Li Zijing and nephew Li Guo, could not fight back and the dynasty ended in 1649 when Li Guo died in Nanning, Guangxi.

Emperor

Personal name
(birth–death)Period of reignEra names and dates
Li Zicheng
李自成
(1606–1645)1644–1645Yongchang (永昌) 1644–1645

Notes

References

References

  1. Frederic Wakeman Jr.. (1985). "The Great Enterprise: The Manchu Reconstruction of Imperial Order in Seventeenth-century China". [[University of California Press]].
  2. Huang Weiping (黃衛平). (2010). "Draft history of Da Shun (大順史稿)". Publishing House of San Qin (三秦出版社).
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