Heqin
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Categories: Chinese history stubs | Chinese words and phrases | History of the foreign relations of China | Imperial China
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The Heqin (Chinese: 龢親/和亲; pinyin: Héqīn; literally "peace marriage") is a term used in ancient China for a marriage alliance. It usually referred to the Chinese emperor marrying off a Han Chinese princess, usually a pseudo-princess or concubine which he had never met before, to an aggressive "barbarian" chieftain or ruler. The theory was that in exchange for the marriage, the chieftain would cease all aggressive actions toward China. The best-known example of heqin involved the beauty Wang Zhaojun. The first known of this marriage occurred in 200 BC, when a pseudo-princess was offered to Xiongnu Chanyu as suggested by Lou Jin (later given the surname Liu by imperial court). Heqin was engaged by nearly all dynasties in Chinese history to some extent, but from a contrary to its contemporary dynasties, such as Liao, Jin, Western Xia, Yuan and the Northern Yuan, the Song and Ming dynasties did not practised such alliance for once. They were, however, used to the best effect by Han Dynasty, Tang Dynasty, and the Manchu Qing Dynasty (to Mongol etc. and uncountable):
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