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'''Modu''' (冒頓; c. 234 BCE – 174 BCE) was the ''{{wiki|chanyu}}'' of the [[Xiongnu]] who was chiefly responsible for their rise to power as a nomadic empire on the {{wiki|Eurasian Steppe|steppes}} north of [[China]].<ref name="Lewis 2007">Lewis, Mark Edward. (2007). "The Outer World". In ''The Early Empires: Qin and Han''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 128–154.</ref> Years prior to his ascension, he was sent to the [[Qin dynasty|Qin]] as a political hostage amidst the Xiongnu incursions into [[China]].<ref name="ACJ">''[[Assassin's Creed: Codename Jade]]''</ref> He succeeded his father [[Touman]] after having him [[assassination|assassinated]] on a hunting trip.<ref name="Sima Qian">Sima Qian. (94 BCE). "Biographies of the Xiongnu". In ''Records of the Grand Historian''. ''Chinese Text Project''. Accessed 4 August 2023. https://ctext.org/shiji/xiong-nu-lie-zhuan.</ref> | '''Modu''' (冒頓; c. 234 BCE – 174 BCE) was the ''{{wiki|chanyu}}'' of the [[Xiongnu]] who was chiefly responsible for their rise to power as a nomadic empire on the {{wiki|Eurasian Steppe|steppes}} north of [[China]].<ref name="Lewis 2007">Lewis, Mark Edward. (2007). "The Outer World". In ''The Early Empires: Qin and Han''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 128–154.</ref> Years prior to his ascension, he was sent to the [[Qin dynasty|Qin]] as a political hostage amidst the Xiongnu incursions into [[China]].<ref name="ACJ">''[[Assassin's Creed: Codename Jade]]''</ref> He succeeded his father [[Touman]] after having him [[assassination|assassinated]] on a hunting trip.<ref name="Sima Qian">Sima Qian. (94 BCE). "Biographies of the Xiongnu". In ''Records of the Grand Historian''. ''Chinese Text Project''. Accessed 4 August 2023. https://ctext.org/shiji/xiong-nu-lie-zhuan.</ref> | ||
== Behind Scence == | |||
* Modu was sent to Yuezhi instead of China in history. | |||
* 冒頓 read as ''Modun'' 墨頓 (Medieval Chinese: *''mək-tuən<sup>H</sup>''; following to Sima Zhen's commentary on Shiji) and ''Modu'' 墨毒 (Medieval Chinese: *''mək-duok''; following Song Qi's commentary on Hanshu) | |||
* Based on the above evidence,some scholars assume the different orgins of the name, Friedrich Hirth think the name from Turki and Mongolian word Bagatur (Brave), Shiratori Kurakichi (白鳥 庫吉) think it from Mongolian word Bagdo (Divine). Luo Xin(罗新) advocates that this word is a appellation for the title of Chanyu rather than a personal name.<ref>Luo Xin, ''A Study on the Xiongnu Chanyu title,'' ed.Luo Xin, ''Inner Asian Orgin: A study on title and name of Medieval northern people,''(Social Sciences Academic Press 2022), 31-2 [罗新:《匈奴单于号研究》,《内亚渊源:中古北族名号研究》,社会科学文献出版社2022年版,31-32页。]</ref> | |||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== | ||
Revision as of 05:17, 5 August 2023
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Modu (冒頓; c. 234 BCE – 174 BCE) was the chanyu of the Xiongnu who was chiefly responsible for their rise to power as a nomadic empire on the steppes north of China.[1] Years prior to his ascension, he was sent to the Qin as a political hostage amidst the Xiongnu incursions into China.[2] He succeeded his father Touman after having him assassinated on a hunting trip.[3]
Behind Scence
- Modu was sent to Yuezhi instead of China in history.
- 冒頓 read as Modun 墨頓 (Medieval Chinese: *mək-tuənH; following to Sima Zhen's commentary on Shiji) and Modu 墨毒 (Medieval Chinese: *mək-duok; following Song Qi's commentary on Hanshu)
- Based on the above evidence,some scholars assume the different orgins of the name, Friedrich Hirth think the name from Turki and Mongolian word Bagatur (Brave), Shiratori Kurakichi (白鳥 庫吉) think it from Mongolian word Bagdo (Divine). Luo Xin(罗新) advocates that this word is a appellation for the title of Chanyu rather than a personal name.[4]
Appearances
References
- ↑ Lewis, Mark Edward. (2007). "The Outer World". In The Early Empires: Qin and Han. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 128–154.
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Codename Jade
- ↑ Sima Qian. (94 BCE). "Biographies of the Xiongnu". In Records of the Grand Historian. Chinese Text Project. Accessed 4 August 2023. https://ctext.org/shiji/xiong-nu-lie-zhuan.
- ↑ Luo Xin, A Study on the Xiongnu Chanyu title, ed.Luo Xin, Inner Asian Orgin: A study on title and name of Medieval northern people,(Social Sciences Academic Press 2022), 31-2 [罗新:《匈奴单于号研究》,《内亚渊源:中古北族名号研究》,社会科学文献出版社2022年版,31-32页。]
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