Jin dynasty (266–420)

The Jin dynasty or the Jin Empire, officially Jin, sometimes distinguished as the or the , was an imperial dynasty in China that existed from 266 to 420. It was founded by Sima Yan, eldest son of Sima Zhao, who had previously been declared the King of Jin. There are two main divisions in the history of the dynasty. The (266–316) was established as the successor to Cao Wei after Sima Yan usurped the throne from Cao Huan. The capital of the Western Jin was initially in Luoyang, though it later moved to Chang'an (modern Xi'an). In 280, after conquering Eastern Wu, the Western Jin ended the Three Kingdoms period and reunited China proper for the first time since the end of the Han dynasty.
From 291 to 306, a series of civil wars known as the War of the Eight Princes were fought over control of the Jin state which weakened it considerably. In 304, the dynasty experienced a wave of rebellions by non-Han ethnicities termed by exonym as "Five Barbarians". The "barbarians" went on to establish nonpermanent dynastic states in northern China. This helped to usher in the Sixteen Kingdoms era of Chinese history, in which states in the north rose and fell in rapid succession, constantly fighting both one another and the Jin. Han-Zhao, one of the northern states established during the disorder, sacked Luoyang in 311, captured Chang'an in 316, and executed Emperor Min of Jin in 318, ending the Western Jin era. Sima Rui, who succeeded Emperor Min, then reestablished the Jin dynasty with its capital in Jiankang (modern Nanjing), inaugurating the (317–420).
The Eastern Jin dynasty remained in near-constant conflict with its northern neighbors for most of its existence, and it launched several invasions of the north with the aim of recovering its lost territories. In 383, the Eastern Jin inflicted a devastating defeat on the Former Qin, a Di-ruled state that had briefly unified northern China. In the aftermath of that battle, the Former Qin state splintered, and Jin armies recaptured the lands south of the Yellow River. The Eastern Jin was eventually usurped by General Liu Yu in 420 replaced with the Liu Song dynasty. The Eastern Jin dynasty is considered the second of the Six Dynasties. Provided by Wikipedia
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FPGA Implementation of A∗ Algorithm for Real-Time Path Planning by Yuzhi Zhou, Xi Jin, Tianqi Wang
Published 2020-01-01
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Optimizing the Water Resources Disposition of Maoming City by LIU Feng-yuan, MO Xi-jin
Published 2005-01-01
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Intelligent End-Edge Computation Offloading Based on Lyapunov-Guided Deep Reinforcement Learning by Xue Feng, Chi Xu, Xi Jin, Changqing Xia, Jing Jiang
Published 2024-11-01
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Deployment optimization for a long-distance wireless backhaul network in industrial cyber physical systems by Jintao Wang, Xi Jin, Peng Zeng, Ming Wan, Changqing Xia
Published 2017-11-01
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RP-Ring: A Heterogeneous Multi-FPGA Accelerator by Shuaizhi Guo, Tianqi Wang, Linfeng Tao, Teng Tian, Zikun Xiang, Xi Jin
Published 2018-01-01
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Development of a novel predictive model for a successful stone removal after flexible ureteroscopic lithotripsy based on ipsilateral renal function: a single-centre, retrospective... by Hong Li, Liang Zhou, Xi Jin, Yucheng Ma, Zhongyu Jian, Liyuan Xiang, Deyi Luo, Kun-Jie Wang
Published 2022-06-01
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Assessing the changes in childbirth care practices and neonatal outcomes in Western China: pre-comparison and post-comparison study on early essential newborn care interventions by Yan Wang, Tao Xu, Qing Yue, Xi Jin, Xiaona Huang, Wen Qu, Jin Liuxing Yang, Xiaobo Tian, Kathryn Martin, Anuradha Narayan
Published 2020-12-01
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Circuit mechanism underlying fragmented sleep and memory deficits in 16p11.2 deletion mouse model of autism by Ashley Choi, Bowon Kim, Eleanor Labriola, Alyssa Wiest, Yingqi Wang, Jennifer Smith, Hyunsoo Shin, Xi Jin, Isabella An, Jiso Hong, Hanna Antila, Steven Thomas, Janardhan P. Bhattarai, Kevin Beier, Minghong Ma, Franz Weber, Shinjae Chung
Published 2024-12-01
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