Sholu
Sovereignempire

Later Zhao

319 CE – 351 CE

Quick Facts

Type
Sovereign · empire
Period
319 CE – 351 CE
Duration
32 years
Known Periods
2
Capital
Ye
Data Confidence
ai_generated

Overview

Zhao, briefly known officially as Wei (衛) in 350 AD, known in historiography as the Later Zhao (simplified Chinese: 后赵; traditional Chinese: 後趙; pinyin: Hòu Zhào; 319–351) or Shi Zhao (石趙), was a dynasty of China ruled by the Shi family of Jie ethnicity during the Sixteen Kingdoms period. Among the Sixteen Kingdoms, the Later Zhao was the second in territorial size to the Former Qin dynasty that once unified northern China under Fu Jian. In historiography, it is given the prefix of "Later" to distinguish it with the Han-Zhao or Former Zhao, which changed its name from "Han" to "Zhao" just before the Later Zhao was founded. When the Later Zhao was founded by former Han-Zhao general Shi Le.

Historical Periods

Later Zhao (337–346)

337 CE – 346 CE

Capital: YeArea: 661,773 km²

Later Zhao (347–352)

347 CE – 352 CE

medium
Capital: YeArea: 661,875 km²

Explore Later Zhao on the Interactive Map

Watch territories shift, borders change, and history unfold across centuries

Later Zhao (319 CE – 351 CE) — Map, Timeline & History | Sholu