After
Tang of Shang overthrew
Jie of Xia, the nine tripod cauldrons were moved to the Shang capital at
Yan. Later, when the Shang king
Pan Geng moved his capital to
Yin (), the cauldrons again went with him. Following the overthrow of the Shang dynasty by the Zhou dynasty, the new
King Wu of Zhou put the nine tripod cauldrons on public display for the first time. The
Bamboo Annals state that in his 15th year of ruling the Zhou, three years after the conquest of Shang, King Wu moved the tripod cauldrons to Luo (). When
King Cheng of Zhou ascended the throne, the
Duke of Zhou built the eastern capital of
Luoyi (later Luoyang), he moved the cauldrons there, at the same time asking King Cheng to carry out their ritual installation in the settlement's Ancestral Hall (). The power of the Zhou royal family began to decline at the start of the Eastern Zhou Period in 771 BCE, with each vassal state clamoring for kingship. At the time of
King Ding of Zhou (r. 605–586 BCE),
King Zhuang of Chu inquired for the first time regarding the "weight of the cauldrons" () only to be rebuffed by the Zhou minister
Prince Man (). Asking such a question was at that time a direct challenge to the power of the reigning dynasty.
King Ling of Chu (r. 540–529 BCE) later again inquired of the cauldrons but was unsuccessful due to unrest sweeping the country During the reign of
King Huiwen of Qin (r. 338–311 BCE), the strategist
Zhang Yi formulated a plan by which he hoped to seize the Nine Tripod Cauldrons and thus gain command of the other Zhou vassal states.
King Qingxiang of Chu, along with the king of the
State of Qi also sought possession of the treasures as did the states of
Wei and
Han. The last Eastern Zhou monarch
King Nan of Zhou (r. 314–256 BCE) dealt with all these rival claimants by playing them off against one another and thus kept possession of the cauldrons. ==Loss and recasting==