(Ji Fa) (about BC 1087 ~ 1043), the second son of Ji Chang, Han nationality (Huaxia), the founder of the Western Zhou Dynasty, Ji surname, posthumous title, and the bronze inscription of the Western Zhou Dynasty often called him Zhen Wang.
He inherited his father's legacy, wiped out the Shang Dynasty in the 1 1 century BC, seized the national political power, established the Western Zhou Dynasty, and showed outstanding military and political talents, becoming a famous monarch in the history of China.
In some versions of history books in countries with Chinese character cultural circle, for reasons that emperors avoid the tradition or copy with the wind, some write "Zhou Wuwang" as "Zhou Wanghu", such as the Korean history book "The History of the Three Kingdoms", and change the weapon to a tiger for Wu Wang.
Zhou Wuwang was born in 1087 BC, which is the year of Jiayin in the lunar calendar and the year of the tiger in the zodiac, so Zhou Wuwang belongs to the tiger.
(BC 1087-BC 1043), surnamed Ji, the second son of Ji Chang, born in qi zhou (now Qishan, Shaanxi), was the founding monarch of the Western Zhou Dynasty. Three years after Yin Ke (about 1043 BC), Zhou Wuwang died and was buried in Zhouling, and was honored as an ancient monarch by later generations.
Four years after Zhou Wuwang ascended the throne, he learned that Shang Zhouwang's ruling group was falling apart, that the royal etiquette was killed, that Ji Zi was imprisoned, and that Wei Zi was out, while the main force of the Shang army went on an expedition to Dongyi, and it was empty to sing, that is, led the troops to cut down the merchants. Taking advantage of the merchants' return to Zhou, on1February 28, he led his headquarters and eight armies to continue eastward in the rain.
After crossing the Yellow River from Bidi (now Xishui Town, Xingyang, Central Plains, Henan Province), it traveled north, turned east to Baiquan (now northwest of Huixian County, Henan Province), and entered Mu Ye at dawn on the fourth day of January.