Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Qin Shi Huang: China’s First Emperor (Encore)
Episode Date: July 27, 2025In 259 BC, a boy named Ying Zheng was born in the state of Qin in modern-day China. He was born into the royal family of the kingdom and ascended to the throne at the age of 13. For most people,... becoming king would be the pinnacle of their achievements. However, this was not to be the case with the King of Qin. He would go on to achieve a status that there wasn’t even a word for. Learn more about Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China, his life, and his legacy on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Jerry Compare quotes and coverages side-by-side from up to 50 top insurers at jerry.ai/daily American Scandal Follow American Scandal on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
In 259 BC, a boy by the name of Ying Zhang was born in the state of Chin in modern-day China.
He was born into the royal family of the kingdom and ascended to the throne at the age of 13.
For most people, becoming king would be the pinnacle of their achievements.
However, this was not to be the case for the king of Chin.
He would go on to achieve a status that there wasn't even a word for.
Learn more about Chin Shih Huang, the first emperor,
of China, his life, and his legacy on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Chin Chih Huang is arguably one of the most influential people in Chinese history.
If you read any list of the most influential and significant people in Chinese history,
his name will almost always be at or near the top.
It isn't a stretch to say that Chin Chih Huang was responsible for the creation of China
and that China wouldn't exist in the form it does today without the actions that he took over 2,000 years ago.
To understand what happened, we need to understand the geopolitical situation in China
at the time. Around the time of birth of Chin Shih Huang in 259 BC, China was deeply embroiled
in the warring states period, which had lasted from about 475 BC to 221 BC. This era followed the decline
of the Zhou Dynasty and was marked by chaos, military conflict, and the rise of seven major states
that all vied for dominance. The geopolitical landscape during this time was complex and characterized
by shifting alliances, frequent warfare, but also significant culture and technological achievements.
China had broken up into seven major states during this period.
Chin, Chu, Zhao, Wei, Han, Yan, and Qi.
Each of the seven states had their own strength and weaknesses.
Chin was located in the western part of China.
Chin was initially considered to be barbaric by the other states, however it had
abundance of natural resources, notably iron and coal, which facilitated the development of strong
military technology and infrastructure. Chu was the largest state in the south. It was known for its
strong military and cultural influence, but was geographically isolated by mountains and rivers,
which sometimes made it vulnerable to northern incursions. Zhao was situated in the north-central
part of China, and was a key military power that often bore the brunt of Chin's military expansions.
Wei had a central location.
It was a significant commercial hub, but it often found itself in conflict with its neighbors over territory.
Han was one of the smaller states.
Han was situated between several larger powers and struggled to maintain its sovereignty against more powerful rivals.
Yan was located in the northeast.
Jan was geographically distant from the heart of the conflicts, but faced threats from both Chi and northern nomadic tribes.
And finally, Chi was the easternmost state.
She was economically prosperous and culturally advanced, with significant developments in trade and technology.
The states often engaged in complex diplomatic maneuvers, forming and breaking alliances to counter the powers of their rivals.
Intrigue and betrayal were common as each state sought to improve its position or survive.
The constant shifting of alliances often led to wars that were as much about weakening opponents through attrition as they were about conquering territory.
The best example I can think of to help make sense of this period in Chinese history would be
Westeros in the Game of Thrones, but without any dragons to keep all the major houses in check.
The man the world knows today as Chin Shih Huang was born at Yingzhang.
The whole naming of ancient Chinese nobility is shockingly complicated.
The name Quinn Shih Huang is really just short for Quinn Shih Huangdi, which literally translates to
the first Chin emperor.
He was born to the crown prince of Chin, who later himself became King Zhong Zhang in 250 BC.
However, his reign was short, having only been king for a little over three years, and when he
died, his young son became King Zhang.
As he was too young to rule in his own right, his mother's lover and his father's former
friend, Liu Buwei, was appointed the royal regent.
There have been rumors and theories that have existed for centuries that Lou Buoy was actually
his father.
After an eight-year regency, he essentially, he ascended.
to the throne in his own right, and then the former regent Lu Buwei attempted a coup,
with a man by the name of Lao Ai, whom Chin Shihang's mother had two children with.
Chin Shihang cracked down on the rebellion brutally, executing Lao Ai by tearing him apart with
horses and killing all of his children and extended family.
Lu Buwei was banished but lived under the constant threat of execution, so he eventually just
killed himself. With the death of Liu Bui, Chin Shahang was now the undisputed ruler of
Chin. Having put down a coup, now his concern was fending off assassination attempts by neighboring
kingdoms. There were multiple attacks on his life, several of which where he had to beat off
his attackers by hand. The reason for the assassination attempts was that Chin had the largest
and most powerful army and the other warring states feared them. In the year 230 BC, the 8th,000
of 29, Chin Shihang began a series of conquests of the neighboring states.
That year, the Han kingdom fell to Chin.
The kingdom of Wei fell in 225 BC, and the kingdom of Chu was conquered in 223 BC.
The kingdoms of Yan and Zhao were conquered in 222 BC, and the final of the seven kingdoms
Qi fell in 221 BC.
Having finally conquered all of his rival states, King Zhang renamed himself,
Chin Shih Huang Di.
The title Huang Di was a new title.
He believed that having conquered so many kingdoms, the title of king was no longer sufficient.
The word Huang Di was a combination of two words.
Huang meaning shining or splendid, and D, which was the name of the high god in the ancient
Chinese religion, and a reference to the mythical yellow emperor who used the title as well.
The word translates into English as emperor, and it was the title used by all.
subsequent Chinese emperors. This is one reason why Chin Shih Huang is considered to be the
first emperor of China. With the conquest of the warring states, the conquest of the Chin didn't cease.
His armies continued in the south going all the way down to what is today Vietnam.
While his armies continued south, the emperor set about leaving his stamp on his empire.
He changed and instituted many laws. He completely eliminated all of the nobility and
in all of the kingdoms and replaced them with his own people.
He built a system of roads throughout the country,
and he established a system of weights and measures
and also simplified the characters in the Chinese language.
The Chin Emperor now began facing threats from the north.
To counter the attack, the Emperor began construction of a great wall.
There had been other small disjointed walls before,
but this wall was to be far greater than any ever built.
And this is the origin of the Great Wall of China.
China, the construction of which continued on for centuries.
The other great engineering project he commissioned was the great Ling Chu Canal.
The canal connected the Yangtze and Pearl Rivers, the two largest waterways in the Empire,
which allowed for the movement of soldiers and goods between the two rivers.
Internally, he cracked out on intellectuals and dissidents.
In the year 213 BC, he had every book that was not explicitly about his regime burned.
The next year in 212 BC, he had 460 scholars buried alive and another 700 stone to death.
After that, all schools of thought or philosophies, including Confucianism, were banned.
The only thing that was allowed in the empire was the doctrine of legalism,
a strict philosophy that emphasized severe punishment for lawbreaking and strong central authority,
which coincidentally helped maintain control over the newly unified state
and it also led to widespread resentment.
Despite all of the massive engineering projects,
the purges of scholars, the political reforms,
and the military conquests,
none of these are the lasting memory
that most people have of the Emperor Chin.
The thing that most people associate with him
is his quest for immortality.
Being the ruler of all that he could survey
probably went to his head.
He felt that he could use his power and influence as emperor
to avoid death itself.
Chin Shih Huang was deeply influenced by Taoist alchemy practices, which often promised the possibility
of immortality through the ingestine of certain elixirs or the performance of specific rituals.
Historical records detail the emperor's dispatching of emissaries to search for the mythical islands of
the immortals where it was believed these life-pronging substances could be found.
His court alchemist created many elixirs and potions for him to consume to extend his life.
Ironically, many of them contained mercury, a highly toxic substance that probably ended up shortening his life, not extending it.
Chin Chih Huang's most famous attempt to secure his immortality was through the construction of his massive mausoleum complex,
which is best known for the terracotta army that guarded it.
The mausoleum itself was a monumental project.
The life-sized statues were crafted to serve as the emperor's protectors in the afterlife, indicating his belief.
in a continued existence that required safeguarding.
There are over 8,000 statues of warriors that were used to guard him in his mausoleum.
The amazing thing about the statues is that each statue appears to have been created based
on an individual soldier.
Each statue is unique and no two are the same.
The terracotta warriors were only first discovered in 1974.
However, as incredible of a discovery as the terracotta warriors were, the great
discovery may yet to be found. The mausoleum complex, which has not been found, is believed to be
an underground palace surrounded by a miniature cosmos, complete with rivers and seas of mercury
intended to mirror the celestial bodies of the universe. Ancient account suggests that the
emperor's tomb consists of models of palaces, scenic towers, and the hundreds of rivers of
China represented by flowing mercury. This design was intended not only to serve the emperor in the
afterlife, but also to protect the tomb by thwarting would-be robbers with traps and a seemingly
endless celestial ocean. Modern scientific studies, including soil analysis around the tomb mound,
have found unusually high concentrations of mercury, lending credibility to the historical descriptions
of the tomb's elaborate defenses and decoration. Chin Shih Huang is believed to have died
on July 12, 210 BC at the age of 49. The imperial name he shows implied that he was, implied that
he thought he would be the first of many rulers from the Chin dynasty. However, his dynasty
was to be short-lived. After the Emperor's death, the Chin dynasty quickly fell into chaos
due to harsh governance, widespread discontent, and a power struggle amongst his successors.
By 206 BC, just four years after his death, the dynasty collapsed entirely under the weight
of internal rebellion and external attacks, leading to the rise of the Han Dynasty.
While the Chin Dynasty barely survived Chin Shih Huang, his legacy can still be felt over 2,000 years later.
The unification of China was something that every successive emperor and dynasty attempted to replicate.
The title he created, Huang Di was used by emperors up until the early 20th century.
Moreover, the Great Wall of China and the Terracotta Warriors, two massive projects that he built,
are two of the most iconic symbols of China today.
For these reasons and many more, Chin Shih Huang has gone down not only as China's first emperor, but also perhaps its greatest.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Oakden and Cameron Kiefer.
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