Jing Ke (? -227 BC), Jiang surname, Qing nationality (ancient "Beijing" sounds like "Qing"). At the end of the Warring States Period, he was a famous assassin, also known as Qing Qing, Jing Qing and Qing Ke. [1] is a descendant of Qing Feng, a doctor of Qi in the Spring and Autumn Period. Like reading and fencing, generous and chivalrous. After traveling to Yan, Tian Guang recommended it to Taizi Dan.
After Qin destroyed Zhao, the soldiers pointed to the southern border of Yan, and Taizi Dan was so frightened that he decided to send Jing Ke into Qin to stab the king of Qin. Jing Ke dedicated the head of Fan, a rebel of Qin State, to Taizi Dan, and the map of Yan Du Kang to the king of Qin, and assassinated him with a camera. Prince Taizi Dan could not bear to kill Fan, so Jing Ke had to meet Fan privately and tell the truth. Van Yuqi committed suicide to fulfill Jing Ke.
In 227 BC, Jing Ke came to the State of Qin with the map of Yan Du Kang and Fan's head to assassinate the king of Qin. Before he left, Yan Taizi Dan and Gao Jianli saw Jing Ke off at the Yishui River. The scene is very tragic. "The wind blows and the water cools, and the strong men are gone forever", which is a poem sung by Jing Ke when he left. After Jing Ke and Qin Wuyang entered Qin, the king of Qin summoned them in Xianyang Palace. After Fan presented his head, he presented a map of Du Kang (now Zhuoxian, Yixian and Gu 'an in Hebei). Jing Ke saw that the dagger was pitiful, and he missed the opportunity. After being seriously wounded by the sword of the king of Qin, he was killed by the guards of Qin.