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{{Character Infobox
{{Character Infobox
|image = Wiki noimage.jpg
|image = Wiki noimage.jpg
|death = 515 BCE<br>{{Wiki|Wu (state)|State of Wu}}, [[Zhou dynasty|Western Zhou]]
|death = 515 BCE<br>{{Wiki|Wu (state)|Wu}}
|species = [[Human]]
|species = [[Human]]
}}
}}
'''Zhuan Zhu''' (專諸; died 515 BCE) was an assassin who lived during the {{Wiki|Spring and Autumn period}} of ancient [[China]].
'''Zhuan Zhu''' (專諸; died 515 BCE) was an assassin from the {{wiki|Wu (state)|State of Wu}} who lived in the 6th century BCE. He was hired by Prince Guang (公子光) to kill King {{wiki|Liao of Wu}} (吳王僚) so that Guang could take the throne for himself.
 
In 515 BCE,<ref name="專諸">{{WP|zh:專諸|專諸}}</ref> Zhuan Zhu succeeded in this deed by [[assassination|assassinating]] King Liao at a party with a [[short blade|dagger]] hidden in a fish although he was slain upon completing this mission. Prince Guang went on to ascend the throne as King {{wiki|Helü of Wu}}.


==Biography==
==Biography==
During the late 6th century BCE, Zhuan Zhu was hired by {{Wiki|Helü of Wu|Prince Guang}} to assassinate King {{Wiki|Liao of Wu}} in order to take the throne for himself. In 515 BCE, Zhuan Zhu succeeded in this deed by assassinating Liao in a party with a [[dagger]] hidden in a fish. He was later killed after having completed his mission.<ref name="Wiki">{{WP|Zhuan Zhu}}</ref>
Zhuan Zhu was a native of Tangyi (堂邑<ref name="Sima 94 BCE">[[Sima Qian]]. [https://ctext.org/shiji/ci-ke-lie-zhuan Biographies of Assassins]. ''{{wiki|Records of the Grand Historian}}''. 94 BCE. ''Chinese Text Project''. Accessed 26 June 2021.</ref> or 棠邑<ref name="專諸" />) in Wu, and his feats were known to {{wiki|Wu Zixu}} (伍子胥), a noble who was forced to flee for his life from {{wiki|Chu (state)|Chu}} to Wu.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
===Succession crisis===
Upon gaining an audience with King Liao of Wu, Zixu initially pitched to the king the benefits of a campaign against Chu. King Liao's cousin, Prince Guang, advised against this, reminding him that the king's father and brothers all met their ends in Chu. He shared his insight that Wu Zixu sought only to satiate his vengeance and did not have the interests of Wu in mind. While Liao ceased to consider the proposal any further, Zixu came to learn that Guang secretly longed to murder his uncle and usurp the throne. Remembering Zhuan Zhu, he recommended the man to Guang as an agent, simultaneously hoping that involvement in this conspiracy would advance his own ambitions.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
Liao and Guang were both grandsons of King Zhufan of Wu, who had three young brothers: Yuji (餘祭), Yimei (夷眛), and Jizha (季札). Because Zhufan greatly respected the virtue of Jizha (季札), he went against primogeniture, did not create a crown prince, and mandated that the throne would be passed from brother to brother, so that Jizha might become king himself one day. As chance would have it, both Yuji and Yimei did get their turns on the throne, but after Yimei's death, Jizha obstinately refused to accede himself. This resulted in the throne instead being given to Liao, the eldest of Zhufan's sons by a [[concubine]] rather than his formal wife. Because of Liao's {{wiki|Dishu system|underprivileged birth status}}, Guang believed that the kingdom should have reverted to the principle of primogeniture, and that he, as Yimei's son by his formal wife, was the rightful heir to the throne.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
===Wu troops bogged down===
Upon being hired by Guang, Zhuan Zhu served the prince faithfully. In 516 BCE,<ref name="專諸" /> King {{wiki|Ping of Chu}} died, and King Liao of Wu thought it was opportune to invade in their time of mourning. In the spring, he assigned his younger brothers Gaiyu (蓋餘) and Shuyong (屬庸) as generals to lead the campaign against Chu, and they laid siege to the city of Qian (灊). At the same time, he dispatched Jizha to {{wiki|Jin (Chinese state)|Jin}} to monitor any changes in the other feudal lords' activities. Back at Qian, Chu forces counter-attacked and managed to cut-off Gaiyu and Shuyong's path to retreat.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
Noticing this, Prince Guang excitedly urged Zhuan Zhu, "''This moment cannot be lost! If we do not seek it, how would we obtain it? After all, I am the true heir to the throne. I ought to be the one acceded to it. Although Jizha has returned, he will not oust me''".<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
Zhuan Zhu agreed with his analysis and responded:<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
<blockquote>"''I can kill King Liao. His mother is old, his children are young, and his two little brothers, leading troops against Chu, have had their rear lines severed. Presently, the Wu on the outside are trapped in Chu, and on the inside, they are devoid of officials with the gall to obstruct us. They have nothing like what we can do.''"</blockquote>
 
With this affirmation, Prince Guang {{wiki|kowtow|bowed}} his head in gratitude and pronounced, "''My body is your body''."<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
===Killing with Fish Intestines===
In 515 BCE,<ref name="Sima timeline">[[Sima Qian]]. "[https://ctext.org/shiji/shi-er-zhu-hou-nian-biao Timeline of Twelve Feudal Lords]". ''[[Record of the Grand Historian|Records of the Grand Historian]]''. 94 BE. ''Chinese Text Project''. Accessed 26 June 2021.</ref> Prince Guang invited King Liao of Wu to a banquet for the assassination. He hid armoured troops in the basement below his mansion while Zhuan Zhu hid a dagger inside of a fish's stomach. On arrival, King Liao was scrupulous about his security and had his own guards posted from his palace all the way to Prince Guang's residence in a long line. Every door and every stairwell of the mansion were likewise stationed by his most intimate followers on both sides, and every one of them wielded ''pi'' (鈹), long [[spear]]s with double-edged [[sword]] blades for heads.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
The feast appeared to go on merrily until Liao fell drunk from [[wine]], whereupon Guang excused himself by claiming that his foot was in pain and that he wished to go check on it and rest. In reality, he was fetching his guards in the basement for the ambush. Meanwhile, Zhuan Zhu carried the roasted fish up to the dining room as though to personally serve it to the king. The instant he split open the fish, he seized the dagger within and stabbed it into him. King Liao died at the scene, but this brazen act was committed in front of all the other guests, and the king's guards threw themselves at Zhuan Zhu from all sides. He was swiftly cut down himself.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />
 
The room erupted into panic and disorder, and it was then that Guang arrived with his soldiers and slaughtered King Liao's party en masse. Following this, Guang declared himself King of Wu with the regnal name Helü (闔閭). Although he was slain in the act, Zhuan Zhu had succeeded in his mission.<ref name="Sima 94 BCE" />  


==Legacy==
===Legacy===
His story passed into folklore, where the dagger he used came to be known as Yuchang (魚腸), or "Fish intestines", because it was small enough to be hidden in a fish.<ref name="Wiki" />
Zhuan Zhu's story passed into folklore, where the dagger he used came to be known as 'Fish Intestine Dagger' (魚腸劍), because it was small enough to be hidden in the the stomach of a fish.<ref name="專諸" />


Centuries later, Zhuan Zhu, alongside [[Cao Mo]], [[Yu Rang]], [[Nie Zheng]] and [[Jing Ke]], was listed by the historian [[Sima Qian]] as one of China's earliest [[assassins]], known to later generations as "the Five Great Assassins."<ref name="ACD">''[[Assassin's Creed: Dynasty]]'' – {{Cite|6 June 2021. Issue needed}}</ref>
Centuries later, Zhuan Zhu, alongside [[Cao Mo]], [[Yu Rang]], [[Nie Zheng]] and [[Jing Ke]], was listed by the historian [[Sima Qian]] as one of China's earliest [[assassins]], known to later generations as "the Five Great Assassins."<ref name="Dynasty 0">''[[Assassin's Creed: Dynasty]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Dynasty Chapter 0|Preview]]</ref>


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 05:22, 27 June 2021


Zhuan Zhu (專諸; died 515 BCE) was an assassin from the State of Wu who lived in the 6th century BCE. He was hired by Prince Guang (公子光) to kill King Liao of Wu (吳王僚) so that Guang could take the throne for himself.

In 515 BCE,[1] Zhuan Zhu succeeded in this deed by assassinating King Liao at a party with a dagger hidden in a fish although he was slain upon completing this mission. Prince Guang went on to ascend the throne as King Helü of Wu.

Biography

Zhuan Zhu was a native of Tangyi (堂邑[2] or 棠邑[1]) in Wu, and his feats were known to Wu Zixu (伍子胥), a noble who was forced to flee for his life from Chu to Wu.[2]

Succession crisis

Upon gaining an audience with King Liao of Wu, Zixu initially pitched to the king the benefits of a campaign against Chu. King Liao's cousin, Prince Guang, advised against this, reminding him that the king's father and brothers all met their ends in Chu. He shared his insight that Wu Zixu sought only to satiate his vengeance and did not have the interests of Wu in mind. While Liao ceased to consider the proposal any further, Zixu came to learn that Guang secretly longed to murder his uncle and usurp the throne. Remembering Zhuan Zhu, he recommended the man to Guang as an agent, simultaneously hoping that involvement in this conspiracy would advance his own ambitions.[2]

Liao and Guang were both grandsons of King Zhufan of Wu, who had three young brothers: Yuji (餘祭), Yimei (夷眛), and Jizha (季札). Because Zhufan greatly respected the virtue of Jizha (季札), he went against primogeniture, did not create a crown prince, and mandated that the throne would be passed from brother to brother, so that Jizha might become king himself one day. As chance would have it, both Yuji and Yimei did get their turns on the throne, but after Yimei's death, Jizha obstinately refused to accede himself. This resulted in the throne instead being given to Liao, the eldest of Zhufan's sons by a concubine rather than his formal wife. Because of Liao's underprivileged birth status, Guang believed that the kingdom should have reverted to the principle of primogeniture, and that he, as Yimei's son by his formal wife, was the rightful heir to the throne.[2]

Wu troops bogged down

Upon being hired by Guang, Zhuan Zhu served the prince faithfully. In 516 BCE,[1] King Ping of Chu died, and King Liao of Wu thought it was opportune to invade in their time of mourning. In the spring, he assigned his younger brothers Gaiyu (蓋餘) and Shuyong (屬庸) as generals to lead the campaign against Chu, and they laid siege to the city of Qian (灊). At the same time, he dispatched Jizha to Jin to monitor any changes in the other feudal lords' activities. Back at Qian, Chu forces counter-attacked and managed to cut-off Gaiyu and Shuyong's path to retreat.[2]

Noticing this, Prince Guang excitedly urged Zhuan Zhu, "This moment cannot be lost! If we do not seek it, how would we obtain it? After all, I am the true heir to the throne. I ought to be the one acceded to it. Although Jizha has returned, he will not oust me".[2]

Zhuan Zhu agreed with his analysis and responded:[2]

"I can kill King Liao. His mother is old, his children are young, and his two little brothers, leading troops against Chu, have had their rear lines severed. Presently, the Wu on the outside are trapped in Chu, and on the inside, they are devoid of officials with the gall to obstruct us. They have nothing like what we can do."

With this affirmation, Prince Guang bowed his head in gratitude and pronounced, "My body is your body."[2]

Killing with Fish Intestines

In 515 BCE,[3] Prince Guang invited King Liao of Wu to a banquet for the assassination. He hid armoured troops in the basement below his mansion while Zhuan Zhu hid a dagger inside of a fish's stomach. On arrival, King Liao was scrupulous about his security and had his own guards posted from his palace all the way to Prince Guang's residence in a long line. Every door and every stairwell of the mansion were likewise stationed by his most intimate followers on both sides, and every one of them wielded pi (鈹), long spears with double-edged sword blades for heads.[2]

The feast appeared to go on merrily until Liao fell drunk from wine, whereupon Guang excused himself by claiming that his foot was in pain and that he wished to go check on it and rest. In reality, he was fetching his guards in the basement for the ambush. Meanwhile, Zhuan Zhu carried the roasted fish up to the dining room as though to personally serve it to the king. The instant he split open the fish, he seized the dagger within and stabbed it into him. King Liao died at the scene, but this brazen act was committed in front of all the other guests, and the king's guards threw themselves at Zhuan Zhu from all sides. He was swiftly cut down himself.[2]

The room erupted into panic and disorder, and it was then that Guang arrived with his soldiers and slaughtered King Liao's party en masse. Following this, Guang declared himself King of Wu with the regnal name Helü (闔閭). Although he was slain in the act, Zhuan Zhu had succeeded in his mission.[2]

Legacy

Zhuan Zhu's story passed into folklore, where the dagger he used came to be known as 'Fish Intestine Dagger' (魚腸劍), because it was small enough to be hidden in the the stomach of a fish.[1]

Centuries later, Zhuan Zhu, alongside Cao Mo, Yu Rang, Nie Zheng and Jing Ke, was listed by the historian Sima Qian as one of China's earliest assassins, known to later generations as "the Five Great Assassins."[4]

Appearances

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 專諸 on Wikipedia
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 Sima Qian. Biographies of Assassins. Records of the Grand Historian. 94 BCE. Chinese Text Project. Accessed 26 June 2021.
  3. Sima Qian. "Timeline of Twelve Feudal Lords". Records of the Grand Historian. 94 BE. Chinese Text Project. Accessed 26 June 2021.
  4. Assassin's Creed: DynastyPreview

fr:Zhuan Zhu