The Guanzhong region became the heartland of the
Zhou after
Jī clan leader
Gugong Danfu relocated his people south from
Bin (modern day
Binzhou, Shaanxi) to evade the violent raidings by
Xunyu,
Xianyun and
Di nomads. It is from Guanzhong region that the Zhou state prospered and eventually conquered the
Shang dynasty to establish the
Zhou dynasty in 1046 BC. After the
Quanrong nomads, with collaboration from
Marquess of Shen, killed
King You of Zhou and sacked the Zhou capital
Haojing in
771 BC, the
Western Zhou dynasty collapsed and the surviving Zhou court fled east to
Luoyi. The
Yíng clan, then a minor
marcher vassal based in the
Longxi Basin as a
buffer state on the western frontier of the Chinese civilization, sent troops to escort
King Ping of Zhou along the journey. In gratitude, King Ping granted a
mid-level nobility to the Yíng leader,
Count Xiang, and promised him authority to permanently claim any lands his clan can recapture from the nomads. The resultant
Qin state then spent the next few centuries fighting off various nomads to its north and west and eventually consolidated its base in the Guanzhong Plain and the
Loess Plateau. The Qin capital then relocated progressively east from Qinyi (in modern
Qingshui County,
Gansu) to Yong (in modern
Fengxiang County,
Shaanxi), then to
Yueyang (in modern
Yanliang District of
Xi'an, Shaanxi), and eventually to
Xianyang northeast across the
Wei River from the ruined old Zhou capital of
Fenghao. Four passes were then built to defend this new heartland against hostile attacks from both the east and the west. During the
Warring States period, Qin grew powerful under
Shang Yang's
legalist reforms, and militarily became increasingly more successful, and its rivals to the east claimed that the Qin army was a "troop of tigers and wolves", and it was often said that "Guanzhong produces generals; Guandong produces ministers". After constructing
irrigation systems such as
Zhengguo Canal, the already fertile Guanzhong region became extremely productive, allowing Qin state to become the preeminent power, repeatedly defeating and seizing more territory from its rivals to the east, and
eventually unified China and established the
Qin dynasty in
221 BC. After
First Emperor's death, the Qin dynasty soon fell into chaos due to the corrupt rule of
Qin Er Shi and
Zhao Gao, and various rebellions broke out. In
206 BC, the rebel leader
Liu Bang successfully invaded Guanzhong and forced the last Qin ruler,
Ziying, to surrender the capital Xianyang, ending the Qin dynasty. Liu Bang entered the capital peacefully, and issued strict orders forbidding his troops from
looting and harming the locals. However, he was forced to hand control over to another more powerful rebel leader
Xiang Yu, who sacked, pillaged and torched Xianyang before enfeoffing the Guanzhong region to three surrendered Qin generals
Zhang Han,
Sima Xin and
Dong Yi, collectively known as the "
Three Qins". However, merely four months later, Liu Bang returned with his newly appointed generalissimo
Han Xin and reconquered the Guanzhong region, and used it as his base to eventually defeat Xiang Yu in the
subsequent civil war. After establishing the
Han dynasty, Liu Bang created a new capital named
Chang'an, which is just across the Wei River from the ruined Qin capital Xianyang. Since the Western Zhou dynasty, the area was the capital region of China for a total of 12 dynasties including the Qin,
Western Han,
Sui, and
Tang. By the Tang dynasty the economic center of China had shifted south to the
Yangtze basin and Guanzhong became increasingly dependent on supplies transported via the
Grand Canal. After the destruction of
Chang'an in the last years of the Tang, Guanzhong became less significant politically as well as economically in later dynasties. ==See also==