Wen Qin

Wen Qin
文欽
Senior General Who Guards the North
(鎮北大將軍)
In office
255 (255) – February or March 258 (February or March 258)
MonarchSun Liang
Protector-General (都護)
In office
255 (255) – February or March 258 (February or March 258)
MonarchSun Liang
Administrator of Lujiang (廬江太守)
In office
? (?)–255 (255)
MonarchCao Mao
Inspector of Yang Province (揚州刺史)
In office
? (?)–? (?)
MonarchCao Fang
General of the Vanguard (前將軍)
In office
? (?)–? (?)
MonarchCao Fang
Personal details
BornUnknown
Bozhou, Anhui
DiedFebruary or March 258[a]
Shou County, Anhui
Children
Parent
  • Wen Ji (father)
OccupationMilitary general, politician
Courtesy nameZhongruo (仲若)
PeerageMarquis of Qiao (譙侯)

Wen Qin (died February or March 258),[a] courtesy name Zhongruo, was a Chinese military general and politician of the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period of China.

Wen Qin was a son of Wen Ji (文稷), a general who served under Cao Cao. In September or October 219, during Wei Feng's rebellion, Wen Qin was implicated and imprisoned. Wen Qin was flogged a few hundred times and was supposed to be executed, but Cao Cao spared him on his father's account.[2]

He served as the Inspector of Yang Province during the reign of the third Wei emperor, Cao Fang. In 254, when the Wei regent Sima Shi, who effectively controlled the Wei government, deposed Cao Fang and replaced him with Cao Mao, Wen Qin was deeply displeased because his loyalty was to the Wei emperor and not the Sima family. In the following year, he and another Wei general, Guanqiu Jian, started a rebellion in Shouchun (present-day Shou County, Anhui) against Sima Shi. However, Sima Shi managed to suppress the rebellion within months; Guanqiu Jian was killed while Wen Qin and his family escaped and defected to Wei's rival state, Eastern Wu. In 257, when another Wei general Zhuge Dan started a rebellion in Shouchun against the Wei regent Sima Zhao (Sima Shi's brother and successor), Wen Qin and some Wu forces came to Shouchun to support Zhuge Dan. Sima Zhao led Wei forces to besiege Shouchun and the siege dragged on until early 258. As the situation became more dire, relations between Wen Qin and Zhuge Dan deteriorated, especially since they did not trust each other before. Zhuge Dan eventually had Wen Qin executed. Wen Qin's sons, Wen Yang and Wen Hu, fled from Shouchun and surrendered to Sima Zhao.

  1. ^ ([太平]三年春正月,諸葛誕殺文欽。) Sanguozhi vol. 48.
  2. ^ (《魏書》:欽字仲若,譙郡人。父稷,建安中為騎將,有勇力。欽少以名將子,材武見稱。魏諷反,欽坐與諷辭語相連,及下獄,掠笞數百,當死,太祖以稷故赦之。) Wei Shu (by Wang Chen et. al.) annotation in Sanguozhi, vol.28


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