Dian was an ancient kingdom situated in modern
Yunnan, southwestern China. According to Han historian,
Sima Qian, it was established in 279 BC by Zhuang Qiao, a general of
Chu during the
Warring States period. He was sent to the region around
Dian Lake as part of a Chu military campaign. When the Chu homeland was invaded by the
Qin, Zhuang Qiao decided to stay in Yunnan and established the Dian kingdom. The
Qin dynasty was subsequently overthrown by the Han, and the commanderies of the new dynasty, Ba and Shu, bordered Dian. In 135 BC, the Han envoy Tang Meng brought gifts to the king of
Yelang, a kingdom bordering Dian, and convinced him to submit to the Han. The Jianwei Commandery was established in the region. In 122 BC, Emperor Wu dispatched four groups of envoys to the southwest in search of a route to
Daxia in Central Asia. One group was welcomed by the king of Dian but none of them were able to make it any further as they were blocked from going any further north by the Sui and
Kunming tribes in the
Erhai region and the
Di and Zuo tribes in the south. However they learned that further west there was a kingdom called Dianyue where the people rode elephants and traded with the merchants from Shu in secret. Han observers saw Dian as a potential periphery that could be absorbed by the empire beyond its frontiers. Dian was a major business center, linked by networks of prosperous trading routes to modern South and Southeast Asia. The trade connections were seen as attractive to the Han rulers as they desired areas with prosperous maritime trade routes. These incentives motivated Emperor Wu to extend the Han dynasty's control further southwest to secure access to products such as silk and bamboo, iron, tin, and silver. ==Campaigns==