King Youmiu

King Youmiu of Zhao
趙幽繆王
King of Zhao
Reign235–228 BCE
PredecessorKing Daoxiang
SuccessorZhao Jia (as King of Dai)
Bornc. 245 BCE
DiedUnknown
SpouseUnknown
Names
Ancestral name: Yíng (嬴)
Lineage name: Zhào (趙)
Given name: Qiān (遷)
Posthumous name
King Youmiu (幽繆王)
or
King Youmin (幽愍王)
HouseYing
DynastyZhao
FatherKing Daoxiang
MotherQueen Daochang

King Youmiu of Zhao (Chinese: 趙幽繆王; r. 235–228 BCE), personal name Zhao Qian, was a king of the Zhao state.

The younger son of King Daoxiang and Queen Daochang, King Youmiu was nevertheless able to succeed to the Zhao throne before his elder brother Zhao Jia due to his mother Chang Hou's intervention. He inherited a country that was in danger of being conquered by the Qin state, as it had been since a defeat at the Battle of Changping in 260 BCE.

The state of Zhao, however, was able to survive thanks to the services of General Li Mu, who successfully repelled Qin attempts at exploiting the situation. The Qin devised a scheme to get rid of him; through bribing a close confidante of King Youmiu, the courtier Guo Kai (郭開), Li Mu was arrested and executed on suspicion of treason.

Without Li Mu, Zhao's defenses were unable to resist the might of Qin. In 228 BCE, Qin forces under the leadership of Wang Jian captured the Zhao capital of Handan. King Youmiu surrendered and was then exiled to Fangling (modern-day northwestern Hubei). Zhao Jia then took the throne as King of Dai (代王) and reigned over a rump state in Zhao's far north.