The Xiongnu in Ye had been partitioned …

Years: 304 - 304

The Xiongnu in Ye had been partitioned into five local tribes after the death of their leader Hucuquan.

The complicated ethnic situation of the mixed frontier settlements instituted during the Eastern Han had grave consequences, not fully apprehended by the Chinese government until the end of the third century.

By 260, Liú Qùbēi had organized the Tiefu confederacy in the North East, and by 290 was leading a splinter group in the southwest.

By this time, non-Chinese unrest has reached alarming proportions along the whole of the Western Jin frontier.

In 304, the sinicized Liu Yuan, a grandson of Yufuluo Chizhisizhu, stirs up descendants of the southern Xiongnu in rebellion in Shanxi, taking advantage of the War of the Eight Princes now raging around the Western Jin capital Luoyang.

Under Liu Yuan's leadership, they are joined by a large number of frontier Chinese and become known as Bei Han.

Liu Yuan uses 'Han' as the name of his state, hoping to tap into the lingering nostalgia for the glory of the Han dynasty, and establishes his capital in Pingyang.

The Xiongnu’s use of large numbers of heavy cavalry with iron armor for both rider and horse gives them a decisive advantage over Jin armies already weakened and demoralized by three years of civil war.

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