miniature pottery infantry (foreground) and cavalry (background); in 1990, when the tomb complex of Emperor Jing of Han (
r. 157–141 BC) and his wife
Empress Wang Zhi (d. 126 BC) was excavated north of
Yangling, over 40,000 miniature pottery figures were unearthed. All of them were one-third life size, smaller than the 8,000-some fully life size soldiers of the
Terracotta Army buried alongside the
First Emperor of Qin. Smaller miniature figurines, on average in height, have also been found in various royal Han tombs where they were placed to guard the deceased tomb occupants in their afterlife. The issue of dealing with powerful princes would soon erupt into a war later known as the
Rebellion of the Seven States. Emperor Jing already had an inimical relationship with his
cousin-once-removed (a nephew of his grandfather
Emperor Gaozu) Liu Pi (劉濞), the prince of the wealthy Principality of Wu (modern southern
Jiangsu, northern
Zhejiang, southern
Anhui, and northern
Jiangxi), which enjoyed, among other natural resources, abundant copper and salt supplies. While Emperor Jing was crown prince, Liu Pi's heir apparent Liu Xian (劉賢) had been on an official visit to the capital
Chang'an, and they gambled together by playing the
liubo board game (heavily tied to
divination and predictions of the future). While playing the board game, Liu Xian offended then-Crown Prince Qi, and Prince Qi threw the wooden board at Liu Xian, killing him. Liu Pi thus had great hatred for the new emperor. Chao Cuo's advice for Emperor Jing was to, using as excuses offenses that princes have committed which had generally been ignored by Emperor Wen, cut down the sizes of the principalities to make them less threatening. Chao explicitly contemplated the possibility that Wu and other principalities may rebel, but justified the action by asserting that if they were going to rebel, it would be better to let them rebel earlier than later, when they might be more prepared. Under this theory, Emperor Jing, in 154 BC, carved out one
commandery each from the Principalities of Chu (modern northern
Jiangsu and northern
Anhui) and
Zhao and six counties from the
Principality of Jiaoxi (roughly modern
Weifang,
Shandong), before carving two commanderies out of Wu. Wu did indeed start a rebellion, in alliance with Chu, Jiaoxi, Zhao, and three other smaller principalities—
Jiaodong,
Zichuan, and
Jinan. Two other principalities that originally agreed to join,
Qi (modern central
Shandong) and
Jibei (modern northwestern
Shandong), reneged at the final moment. Wu also sought assistance from the independent kingdoms of
Dong'ou (modern
Zhejiang) and
Minyue (modern
Fujian); while Dong'ou contributed forces, Minyue did not. Zhao sought assistance from
Xiongnu, but while Xiongnu initially agreed to help, it did not actually enter the war. In accordance with instructions left by Emperor Wen, Emperor Jing commissioned
Zhou Yafu as the commander of his armed forces to face the main rebel force—joint forces of Wu and Chu. However, he soon panicked at the prospect of losing, and at the suggestion of Chao Cuo's enemy
Yuan Ang, he executed Chao to try to appease the seven princes, to no avail. Wu and Chu forces were fiercely attacking the Principality of Liang (modern eastern
Henan), whose prince
Liu Wu, prince of Liang was Emperor Jing's beloved younger brother, and Emperor Jing ordered Zhou to immediately head to Liang to save it. Zhou refused, reasoning that the proper strategy would involve first cutting off the Wu and Chu supply lines, thus starving them, so he headed to the northeast side of Liang and around the Wu and Chu forces to cut off their supplies. The strategy was effective. Wu and Chu, unable to capture Liang quickly and realizing that their supplies were dwindling, headed northeast to attack Zhou. After being unable to get a decisive victory against Zhou, the Wu and Chu forces collapsed from starvation. Liu Pi fled to Donghai, which killed him and sought peace with Han. Liu Wu, the Prince of Chu, committed suicide. The other principalities involved were all eventually defeated as well. ==Middle reign and succession issues==