Category
page 13rd-century BC disestablishments in China
Qin dynasty
dynasty that ruled in China from 221 to 206 BC

Zhou dynasty
dynasty of Ancient Chinese kings (王) lasting from c. 1046 to 256 BC
Chu
Southern Chinese state (c. 1030–223 BCE) during the Zhou dynasty and Warring States Period

Qin
Chinese state from the 9th century BC to 207 BC
Yan
ancient state in northern China during the Shang, Zhou, and Warring States periods (11th century BC – 222 BC)
Zhao
one of the states in ancient China's Warring States period
Han
central Chinese state from 403-230 BCE
Song
one of the twelve feudal states of Western Zhou dynasty
Wey
Chinese state (c. 1040 BCE–209 BCE)
Yiqu
Yiqu (; Old Chinese (444 BCE): > Eastern Han Chinese: *, or ), was an ancient Chinese state which existed in the Hetao region and what is now Ningxia, eastern Gansu and northern Shaanxi during the Zhou dynasty, and was a centuries-long western rival of the state of Qin. It was inhabited by a semi-sinicized people called the Rong of Yiqu (), who were regarded as a branch of western Rong people by contemporary writers, whom modern scholars have attempted to identify as one of the ancestors of the minority people in Northwest China.