The Hubei region was home to sophisticated
Neolithic cultures. By the
Spring and Autumn period (770–476 BC), the territory of today's Hubei formed part of the powerful
State of Chu. Chu, nominally a tributary state of the
Zhou dynasty, was itself an extension of the Chinese civilization that had emerged some centuries before in the north; but Chu also represented a culturally unique blend of northern and southern culture, and it developed into a powerful state that controlled much of the middle and lower
Yangtze River, with its power extending northwards into the
North China Plain. tomb at Mashan,
Jiangling County, Hubei During the
Warring States period (475–221 BC) Chu became the major adversary of the upstart
State of Qin to the northwest (in present-day
Guanzhong,
Shaanxi province), which began to assert itself by outward expansionism. As wars between Qin and Chu ensued, Chu lost more and more land: first its dominance over the
Sichuan Basin, then (in 278 BC) its heartland, which corresponds to modern Hubei. In 223 BC Qin chased down the remnants of the Chu regime, which had fled eastwards
during Qin's wars of uniting China. Qin founded the
Qin dynasty in 221 BC, the first unified dynasty in
China. The Qin dynasty was succeeded in 206 BC by the
Han dynasty, which established the province (
zhou) of
Jingzhou in today's Hubei and
Hunan. The Qin and Han played an active role in the extension of farmland in Hubei, maintaining a system of river dikes to protect farms from summer floods. Towards the end of the Eastern Han dynasty in the beginning of the 3rd century, Jingzhou was ruled by regional warlord
Liu Biao. After his death in 208, Liu Biao's realm was surrendered by
his successors to
Cao Cao, a powerful warlord who had conquered nearly all of north China; but in the
Battle of Red Cliffs (208 or 209), warlords
Liu Bei and
Sun Quan drove Cao Cao out of Jingzhou. Liu Bei then took control of Jingzhou and appointed Guan Yu as administrator of Xiangyang (in modern
Xiangyang, Hubei) to guard Jing province; he went on to conquer Yizhou (the Sichuan Basin), but lost Jingzhou to Sun Quan; for the next few decades Jingzhou was controlled by the
Wu Kingdom, ruled by Sun Quan and his successors. The incursion of northern nomadic peoples into the region at the beginning of the 4th century (
Five Barbarians' rebellion and
Disaster of Yongjia (
永嘉之乱)) began nearly three centuries of division into a nomad-ruled (but increasingly Sinicized) north and a
Han Chinese-ruled south. Hubei, to the south, remained under southern rule for this entire period, until the unification of China by the
Sui dynasty in 589. In 617 the
Tang dynasty replaced Sui, and later on the Tang dynasty placed present-day Hubei under the jurisdiction of several
circuits:
Jiangnanxi Circuit in the south;
Shannandong Circuit (山南东道) in the west, and
Huainan Circuit in the east. After the Tang dynasty disintegrated in the early 10th century, Hubei came under the control of several regional regimes:
Jingnan in the center,
Yang Wu and its successor
Southern Tang to the east, the
Five Dynasties to the north and Shu to Shizhou (施州, in modern
Enshi,
Enshi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture). The
Song dynasty reunified the region in 982 and placed most of Hubei into
Jinghubei Circuit, a longer version of Hubei's current name.
Mongols conquered the region in 1279, and under
their rule the province of
Huguang was established, covering Hubei, Hunan, and parts of
Guangdong and
Guangxi. The
Ming dynasty (1368–1644) drove out the Mongols in 1368. Their version of Huguang province was smaller, and corresponded almost entirely to the modern provinces of Hubei and Hunan combined. Hubei lay geographically outside the centers of the Ming power. During the last years of the Ming, today's Hubei was ravaged several times by the rebel armies of
Zhang Xianzhong and
Li Zicheng. The
Manchu Qing dynasty which took control of much of the region in 1644, soon split Huguang into the modern provinces of Hubei and Hunan. The Qing dynasty, however, continued to maintain a
Viceroy of Huguang, one of the most well-known viceroys being
Zhang Zhidong (in office between 1889 and 1907), whose modernizing reforms made Hubei (especially
Wuhan) into a prosperous center of commerce and industry. The
Huangshi/
Daye area, south-east of Wuhan, became an important center of mining and metallurgy. In 1911, the
Wuchang Uprising took place in modern-day Wuhan. The uprising started the
Xinhai Revolution, which overthrew the Qing dynasty and established the
Republic of China. In 1927 Wuhan became the seat of a government established by left-wing elements of the
Kuomintang, led by
Wang Jingwei; this government later merged into
Chiang Kai-shek's government in
Nanjing. During
World War II the eastern parts of Hubei were conquered and occupied by
Japan, while the western parts remained under Chinese control. During the
Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, Wuhan saw fighting between rival
Red Guard factions. In July 1967, civil strife struck the city in the
Wuhan Incident ("July 20th Incident"), an armed conflict between two hostile groups who were fighting for control over the city at the height of the Cultural Revolution. As the fears of a nuclear war increased during the time of
Sino-Soviet border conflicts in the late 1960s, the
Xianning prefecture of Hubei was chosen as the site of
Project 131, an underground military-command headquarters. The province—and Wuhan in particular—suffered severely from the
1954 Yangtze River Floods. Large-scale dam construction followed, with the
Gezhouba Dam on the
Yangtze River near
Yichang started in 1970 and completed in 1988; the construction of the
Three Gorges Dam, further upstream, began in 1993. In the following years, authorities resettled millions of people from western Hubei to make way for the construction of the dam. A number of smaller dams have been constructed on the Yangtze's tributaries as well. The
Xianning Nuclear Power Plant is planned in Dafanzhen, Tongshan County, Xianning, to host at least four 1,250-megawatt (MW) AP1000 pressurized-water reactors. Work on the site began in 2010; plans envisaged that the first reactor would start construction in 2011 and go online in 2015. However, construction of the first phase had yet to start . On 1 December 2019, the first case of
COVID-19 in the
COVID-19 pandemic was identified in the city of
Wuhan. In January 2020, the
SARS-CoV-2 virus was officially identified, leading local and federal governments to implement massive
quarantine zones across Hubei province, especially in the capital
Wuhan (the epicenter of the outbreak). Authorities partially or fully locked down 15 cities, directly affecting 57 million people. Following severe outbreaks in numerous other countries, including in different areas of the world, the
World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 a pandemic in March 2020. However, after more than eight weeks, the lockdown on most cities in the province was lifted. == Geography ==