The Later Zhou (951โ960 AD) was the fifth and final dynasty of the turbulent Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period in northern China, yet its brief existence profoundly altered the course of Chinese history. Founded by the Han Chinese general Guo Wei, who seized power through a military coup to topple the short-lived Later Han, the Later Zhou emerged from decades of chaos marked by the rule of Shatuo Turk warlords.
Guo Wei, known posthumously as Emperor Taizu, initiated crucial political and economic reforms that began stabilizing the war-torn northern plains. He sought to alleviate the burden on the peasantry, reduced harsh punishments, and began rebuilding the administrative framework that had collapsed after the fall of the Tang Dynasty.
However, it was his adopted son and successor, Chai Rong (Emperor Shizong), who transformed the Later Zhou into a formidable military and economic powerhouse. Widely regarded by historians as one of the most capable and visionary monarchs of the era, Chai Rong harbored a grand ambition to conquer the world in thirty years.
He systematically reformed the military, establishing a highly disciplined, centralized professional army that pledged loyalty to the state rather than individual generals. Economically, he aggressively promoted agriculture, expanded irrigation, and famously launched a massive campaign to confiscate bronze from Buddhist temples to mint desperately needed currency.
Militarily, Chai Rong proved unstoppable. In 954, at the pivotal Battle of Gaoping, he decisively crushed a joint invasion force of the Northern Han and the Khitan Liao Empire, personally charging the enemy lines when his vanguard faltered.
He then turned his sights southward, conquering significant territories from the wealthy Southern Tang and Later Shu kingdoms, absorbing their economic resources. He was on the verge of launching a massive northern expedition to reclaim the lost Sixteen Prefectures from the Khitans when he tragically fell ill and died at the age of 38 in 959.
He left behind a seven-year-old heir, creating a power vacuum. Less than a year later, his most trusted general, Zhao Kuangyin, was elevated to the throne by his troops in the Chenqiao Mutiny, establishing the Song Dynasty.
Zhao Kuangyin inherited the unparalleled military machine and robust economy built by the Later Zhou, allowing him to easily sweep through the remaining Ten Kingdoms and finally reunify China. Thus, while the Later Zhou lasted less than a decade, its visionary leadership and structural reforms were the indispensable bedrock upon which the glorious three-century reign of the Song Dynasty was built.