Eastern Zhou
The Eastern Zhou (/dʒoʊ/; Chinese: 東周; pinyin: Dōngzhōu; Wade–Giles: Tung1-chou1; 771–256 BC) is a period of Chinese history, approximately the second half of the Zhou dynasty, following the Western Zhou period. Characterised by weak central government, it is subdivided into two periods: the Spring and Autumn, during which the ancient aristocracy still held power in a large number of separate polities, and the Warring States, which saw the consolidation of territory into a few domains and the dominance of other social classes. "Eastern" refers to the geographic situation of the royal capital, near present-day Luoyang.
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