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The kings of Changshan in the Jin Dynasty

author:Piconderoga7

The Western Jin Dynasty Changshan State was located in the territory of the Western Jin Dynasty and Had jurisdiction over eight counties, namely Zhending, Shiyi, Jingxing, Shangquyang, Puwu, Nanxingtang, Lingshou, and Jiumen.

The kings of Changshan in the Jin Dynasty

King Xiao of Changshan – Sima Heng. This was again a vassal that Sima Fu contributed to the Western Jin Dynasty, Sima Heng, Zi Ping, the eighth son of Sima Fu, who was successively given the title of Marquis of Deyang Township and Ruyang Zi during the Cao Wei Dynasty, and served as a lieutenant of Ma Du. After Sima Yan established the Western Jin Dynasty, Sima Heng was given the title of King of Changshan, with 3,790 households. However, Sima Heng did not contribute much to the Western Jin Dynasty, and in the second year of the Tai Dynasty (266 AD), Sima Heng died with the posthumous title of Filial Piety.

The second generation of Changshan King- Sima Yin. After Sima Heng's death, he had no heirs, and his nephew Sima Yin, the fourth son of Sima Yong (司馬邕), the son of Sima Yong (司馬邕), the son of Anping Shizi, succeeded Sima Heng and became the new King of Changshan. This was also an obscure King of Changshan, who, after nine years on the throne, died in October of the first year of Xianning (275 AD). After Sima Yin's death, the lineage of the Changshan kingdom is unknown, but there is also a Changshan king.

The deposed King of Changshan, Sima Qi. Sima Qi also served as the King of Changshan, but he was not sent to Sima Yin, but was demoted to the title of King of Changshan by his brother Sima Wei. From August of the first year of Yuan Kang (291 AD) to the first year of Yongning (301 AD), Sima Qi also served as the King of Changshan for nearly eleven years. After he became the King of Changsha again, he never saw any of Sima Zizi being crowned the King of Changshan.

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