Eastern Wu (Chinese: 東吳; pinyin: Dōng Wú), also known as Sun Wu (Traditional Chinese: 孫吳; pinyin: Sūn Wú), refers to a historical independent state in the Jiangnan (Yangtze Delta) region of China. During its existence, its capital was largely at Jianye (建業, modern Nanjing), but at times was at Wuchang (武昌, in modern Ezhou, Hubei). From 222 to 280, Eastern Wu was one of the Three Kingdoms competing for control of China after the fall of the Han Dynasty.
Eastern Wu was finally conquered by the first Jin emperor, Sima Yan, in 280. It was the longest-lived of the three kingdoms.
The island of Taiwan may have been first reached by the Chinese during the Three Kingdoms period. Contacts with the native population and the dispatch of officials to an island named "Yizhou" (夷州) by the Eastern Wu navy might have been to Taiwan, but what Yizhou was is open to dispute; some historians believe it was Taiwan, while others believe it was the Ryūkyū Islands.
| Posthumous Names (Shi Hao 諡號) | Personal names | Year(s) of Reigns | Era Names (Nian Hao 年號) and their range of years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Convention: use personal name | |||
| Da Di (大帝 dà dì) | Sun Quan (孫權 sūn quán) | 222-252 |
Huangwu (黃武 huáng wǔ) 222-229 Huanglong (黃龍 huáng lóng) 229-231 Jiahe (嘉禾 jiā hé) 232-238 Chiwu (赤烏 chì wū) 238-251 Taiyuan (太元 taì yuán) 251-252 Shenfeng (神鳳 shén2 fèng) 252 |
| Kuaiji Wang (會稽王 kuaì jī wáng) | Sun Liang (孫亮 sūn liàng) | 252-258 |
Jianxing (建興 jiàn xīng) 252-253 Wufeng (五鳳 wǔ fèng) 254-256 Taiping (太平 taì píng) 256-258 |
| Jing Di (景帝 jǐng dì) | Sun Xiu (孫休 sūn xiū) | 258-264 | Yong'an (永安 yǒng ān) 258-264 |
| Wucheng Hou (烏程侯 wū chéng hóu) or Guiming Hou (歸命侯; gūi mìng hóu) |
Sun Hao (孫皓 sūn haò) | 264-280 |
Yuanxing (元興 yuán xīng) 264-265 Ganlu (甘露 gān lù) 265-266 Baoding (寶鼎 baǒ dǐng) 266-269 Jianheng (建衡 jiàn héng) 269-271 Fenghuang (鳳凰 fèng huáng) 272-274 Tiance (天冊 tiān cè) 275-276 Tianxi (天璽 tiān xǐ) 276 Tianji (天紀 tiān jì) 277-280 |