Ying (state)

Ying
c. 1030–646 BCE
Ying 應 is located to the north of Chu and southeast of Zhou; it is not to be confused with Ying 英, a different state to the east of Chu.
StatusVassal state
CapitalPingdingshan
Common languagesOld Chinese
Religion
Chinese folk religion
Ancestor veneration
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraZhou dynasty
• Established
c. 1030 BCE
• Disestablished
646 BCE
Today part ofChina

Ying (traditional Chinese: ; simplified Chinese: ; pinyin: Yīng) was a vassal state in eastern China that existed from c. 1030 to 646 BCE. After the fall of the Western Zhou, it continued into the Spring and Autumn period, briefly becoming a vassal state of Chu in the 650s BCE, but was ultimately annexed by the Chu in 646 BCE. Ying was in modern-day Pingdingshan, Henan province, where many artifacts such as bronze vessels from the state have been unearthed.