Qin Shi Huang Ying Zheng (246 BC - 222 BC) was the first founding emperor of the Qin Dynasty to complete the unification of China. Later generations called him "one emperor through the ages". He ascended the throne at the age of 13. At the age of 21, an adult coronation ceremony was held in the old capital Yongcheng. From then on, he officially ascended the throne to "manage the affairs of the state". At the age of 39, he completed the historical cause of unifying China and was called emperor. From 230 BC to 221 BC, the six kingdoms of Han, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan, and Qi were successively destroyed, completing the great cause of unifying the country and establishing the first unified, multi-ethnic, authoritarian central government in Chinese history. Centralized country - Qin Dynasty. Qin Wangzheng believed that his contribution was better than that of the previous Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, so he named himself "Emperor". After destroying the Six Kingdoms, he conquered the Xiongnu in the north, conquered Baiyue in the south, unified currency, unified weights and measures, used chariots on the same track, and wrote books with the same text, abolished the feudal system and replaced it with the system of counties and counties, built the Great Wall, burned books and harassed Confucians. Some of the policies he formulated have been used for thousands of years. His merits can be called "one emperor through the ages". Of course, his merits and demerits are still debated by later generations.
List of Emperors of the Qin Dynasty
The First Emperor of Qin Ying Zheng (221 BC-210 BC)
The Second Emperor of Qin Hu Hai (209 BC-207 BC) year) reigned for 3 years. The youngest son of Qin Shihuang. When Qin Shihuang died of illness while traveling in the south, with the help of Zhao Gao and Li Si, he framed his brother Fusu and forced him to commit suicide. He established himself as the second emperor. When he was in power, he brought disaster to the world and took human life lightly. Killing brothers, sisters and loyal ministers. He practiced harsh governance, but was eventually forced to death by Zhao Gao. This also brought the Qin Empire to a dead end. He will die within three lifetimes.
The third emperor of Qin, Ying Ziying (207 BC), reigned for 47 days. Hu Hai was murdered. Zhao Gaoying appointed Ziying as his successor. Five days after Ziying ascended the throne, he planned to kill Zhao Gao. The Qin Dynasty officially ended at the moment of Ziying's surrender. The fall of an empire that lasted for 550 years.