Feast at Swan Goose Gate

Hong Men Yan
Western Han dynasty mural depicting the feast, discovered in the Northwest 61st Tomb in the Luoyang Ancient Tombs Museum. One of the earliest excavated depictions of the event.
Native name 鴻門宴
English nameFeast at Swan Goose Gate
Date206 BCE
VenueHongmen
LocationXinfeng, Xi'an, Shaanxi
Typefeast
Motiveto assassinate Liu Bang
TargetLiu Bang
PerpetratorFan Zeng
Xiang Zhuang
Organised byXiang Yu
OutcomeLiu Bang fled
Feast at Swan Goose Gate
Traditional Chinese鴻門宴
Simplified Chinese鸿门宴
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHóng Mén Yàn
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingHung4 Mun4 Jin3

The Feast at Swan Goose Gate, also known as the Banquet at Hongmen, Hongmen Banquet, Hongmen Feast and other similar renditions, was a historical event that took place in 206 BCE at Swan Goose Gate (Chinese: ; pinyin: Hóng Mén) at Xinfeng, outside Xianyang, the former capital of the Qin dynasty. Its location in present-day China is roughly at Hongmenbao Village, Xinfeng Town, Lintong District, Xi'an, Shaanxi. The main parties involved in the banquet were Liu Bang and Xiang Yu, two prominent leaders of insurgent forces who rebelled against the Qin dynasty from 209 to 206 BCE.

The Feast is often memorialised in Chinese history, fiction and popular culture. It was one of the highlights of the power struggle between Liu Bang and Xiang Yu leading to the outbreak of the Chu–Han Contention, a violent civil war for supremacy over China which concluded with Xiang Yu's defeat and death at the Battle of Gaixia, followed by Liu Bang's establishment of the Han dynasty with himself as its founding emperor.