History of Beijing

The city of Beijing has a long and rich history that dates back over 3,000 years.

Historical Names of Beijing
Year City Name Dynasty Notes
c. 11th century BC City of Ji 蓟城 State of Ji
(Zhou dynasty)
c. 7th century BC State of Yan
(Zhou dynasty, Warring States)
221 BC Qin
206 BC State of Yan
202 BC Han
106 BC -
318 AD
City of Ji
Youzhou 幽州
Han, Wei, Western Jin (晋)
319 Later Zhao
350 Eastern Jin (晋)
352–57 Former Yan
370 Former Qin
385 Later Yan
397 Northern Dynasties
607 City of Ji Sui
616 Youzhou Tang
742 Fanyang 范阳
Youzhou
759 Yanjing 燕京
765 Youzhou
907 Later Liang
911-13 Yan (Five Dynasties)
913 Later Liang, Later Tang, Later Jin (后晋)
938 Nanjing 南京 Liao
1122 Northern Liao
Yanjing Jin (金)
1122
1123 Yanshan 燕山 Song
1125 Yanjing Jin (金)
1151 Zhongdu 中都
1215 Yanjing Yuan
1271 Dadu (Khanbaliq)
大都
1368 Beiping 北平 Ming
1403 Beijing 北京
1420
1644 Qing
1912 Republic of China
1928 Beiping
1937–40 Beijing
1945 Beiping
1949–present Beijing People's Republic of China
  Capital of regional dynasty or kingdom
  Capital of China

Prior to the unification of China by the First Emperor in 221 BC, Beijing had been for centuries the capital of the ancient states of Ji and Yan. It was a provincial center in the earliest unified empires of China, Qin and Han. The northern border of ancient China ran close to the present city of Beijing, and northern nomadic tribes frequently broke in from across the border. Thus, the area that was to become Beijing emerged as an important strategic and a local political centre. During the first millennia of imperial rule, Beijing was a provincial city in northern China. Its stature grew in the 10th to the 13th centuries when the nomadic Khitan and forest-dwelling Jurchen peoples from beyond the Great Wall expanded southward and made the city a capital of their dynasties, the Liao and Jin. When Kublai Khan made Dadu the capital of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty (1279–1368), all of China was ruled from Beijing for the first time. From 1279 onward, with the exception of two interludes from 1368 to 1420 and 1928 to 1949, Beijing would remain as China's capital, serving as the seat of power for the Ming dynasty (1421–1644), the Manchu-led Qing dynasty (1644–1912), the early Republic of China (1912–1928) and now the People's Republic of China (1949–present).

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