9-542: (Redirected from Yi Prefecture ) Yi Prefecture or Yizhou may refer to: Yizhou (Southwest China) ( 益州 ), a historical province of China covering Southwest China Yi Prefecture (Shandong) ( 沂州 ), active between the 7th and 18th centuries Yi Prefecture (Guangxi) ( 宜州 ), active between the 7th and 13th centuries Yi Prefecture (Hebei) Yi Prefecture (Korea) , now known as Uiju or Uiju County Yizhou District, Hechi ( 宜州区 ), district of Hechi, Guangxi named after
18-542: A massacre at Shoot-Tiger Valley. In 184, concurrent with the outbreak of the Yellow Turban Rebellion in large parts of China, the Liang Province rebellion commenced. Han campaigns to retake the area remained inconclusive, and by 189 Liangzhou was a de facto independent warlord state ruled by Han Sui and Ma Teng . Warlord Cao Cao started an offensive against Liang Province in 211, winning
27-466: A relative of his, but the latter turned against Zhang, conquered most of Yi Province , and proclaimed the Kingdom of Shu . During the subsequent Hanzhong Campaign (217–219), Liu Bei was able to conquer Hanzhong from Cao Cao and thus complete his control over Yi Province. In 221, Liu Bei assumed the title of emperor. Liang Province Liang Province or Liangzhou ( 涼州 ) was a province in
36-572: The Silk Road into Central Asia . In 107 CE, the Xianlian Qiang rebelled against Han authority. After heavy fighting, and proposals to abandon Liang Province, this First Great Qiang Rebellion was quelled in 118. Efforts were made to resettle the province from 129 to 144, although large parts of Liang remained without effective government. General Duan Jiong conducted another successful campaign against Qiang rebels in 167–169, committing
45-611: The First Great Qiang Rebellion (107–118) in Liang Province , unrest also spread to the Hanzhong and Wudu commanderies. In 188, Liu Yan was appointed governor of Yi Province. Upon his death in 194, Yi passed to his son Liu Zhang . In 213, warlord Cao Cao conquered the city of Hanzhong from the Taoist cult leader Zhang Lu , and threatened the rest of Yi. Liu Zhang requested the help of warlord Liu Bei ,
54-533: The historical prefecture Yizhou District, Hami ( 伊州区 ), district of Hami, Xinjiang Yizhou (island) ( 夷洲 ), an island described in historical texts that is possibly Taiwan or the Ryukyus See also [ edit ] Yi (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
63-479: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yizhou&oldid=1245475048 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Chinese-language text Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Yizhou (Southwest China) Yizhou (益州), Yi Province or Yi Prefecture ,
72-587: The northwest of ancient China , in the approximate location of the modern-day province of Gansu . It was bordered in the east by Sili Province . The province was first conquered by the Han Chinese in the 120s BCE during the Han–Xiongnu War , and settled in the decades thereafter. The Hexi Corridor served to connect China proper with the Western Regions , which helped secure important parts of
81-512: Was a zhou (province) of ancient China . Its capital city was Chengdu . During the Han dynasty , it included the commanderies Hanzhong , Ba , Guanghan , Shu , Wenshan , Jianwei , Zangke , Yuexi , Yizhou and Yongchang . It was bordered in the north by Liang Province and Yong Province . At its greatest extent, Yi covered present-day central and eastern Sichuan , Chongqing , southern Shaanxi and parts of Yunnan and Guizhou . During
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