Liu BinLi RuigangShu ZhanQu XiangjunJiao YangWang Yaxing
Starring
Hou YongWang ZhifeiQi FangDu YuluSun Feihu
Ending theme
Fenghua Juedai (风华绝代) performed by Liao Changyong and Tan Jing
Similar
The Emperor in Han Dyn, The Han Triumph, Ming Dynasty in 1566, Bing Sheng, Kangxi Dynasty
The Qin Empire is a 2009 Chinese television series based on Sun Haohui's novel of the same Chinese title. The series chronicles the rise of the Qin state in the Warring States period during the reign of Duke Xiao of Qin. It was produced in 2006 and first aired on television channels in China in December 2009. It will air with an English dub some time in 2016.
In the mid-fourth century BC during the Warring States period, groundbreaking political changes occur in the Qin state in western China. Qin, weakened by poverty and internal conflict, is in peril of being annexed by the six other states in the east. Duke Xiao, the young new ruler of Qin, seeks to restore his state to its former glory and retake the territories lost by Qin in its earlier humiliating defeats by rival states. Duke Xiao recruits several talents to help him in his ambitious plans. The most outstanding one, a statesman called Shang Yang, cooperates closely with Duke Xiao on massive political and economic reforms in Qin that lasted two decades. The changes transform Qin into a powerful state, with legal and military systems that helped to lay the foundation for Qin's eventual unification of China under the Qin dynasty nearly 200 years later in 221 BC.
The series won the Flying Goddess Award and the Golden Eagle Prize for the Best TV Drama.
Qin state
Wang Zhifei as Wei Yang (Shang Yang), a legalist who reforms the Qin government and becomes the chancellor.
Hou Yong as Ying Quliang (Duke Xiao), the ruler of Qin.
Lu Yong as Ying Qian, Duke Xiao's elder brother.
Lü Zhong as the Duchess Dowager, Duke Xiao's mother.
Qi Fang as Yingyu, Duke Xiao's younger sister and Wei Yang's wife.
Xu Huanshan as Duke Xian, Duke Xiao's father and predecessor.
Liu Naiyi as Ying Si (King Huiwen), Duke Xiao's son and successor. Feng Pengfei played the younger Ying Si.
Yu Yang as Jing Jian, the vice chancellor.
Hou Xiangling as Che Ying, a general.
Sun Feihu as Gan Long, the imperial tutor who heads the aristocrat faction that opposes Wei Yang's reforms.
Qiu Yongli as Gongsun Gu, the former tutor to the crown prince who becomes a fugitive.
Lu Ying as Du Zhi, the ancestral temple keeper and Gan Long's student.