This historical study will define the end of the Warring States and the rise of a unified China under the leadership of First Emperor Qin. Emperor Qin had ruled from 220-210 B.C. through the military might of the Qin armies, which ended the period of the Warring States (260-210 B.C.). More so Emperor Qin sought to unite these differing factions by introducing a newly unified set of governing principles that would unite China into a single empire. In this manner, the struggle for a single empire had been achieved under Emperor Qin, which defined a new period of power and unity in Chinese society. In modern Chinese …show more content…
Certainly, Emperor Qin was the first leader to expand the notion of a Chinese empire with such great success, since he was able to maintain order and unity throughout this period until China was unified in 221 B.C. This was a major epoch in the history of China because it defined the unified borders and regions of the country that Emperor Qin formed more than two-thousands years …show more content…
This type of political reorganization attempts to find a unification process between warring states, which could not agree on a broader conception of a empire. In some cases, the historical perception of Emperor Qin’s quest to unify China has often been linked with China’s origins through the cooperative methods of settlements utilized in the formation of the Qin Dynasty:
When population increased and more mouths had to be fed, groups sent off to found new settlements, which were given support and protection by their parental politics under a system of hierarchical power and resource distribution (Cheng