Xiang Yu, male, was recorded as a descendant of Guo Xiang, a vassal state of Zhou Dynasty in Tang and Song Dynasties. His surname is Ji, his first name, and he is a man. He was born in Xia Xiang County, surabaya county (now Suqian City, Jiangsu Province). At the end of Qin Dynasty, he was a statesman and strategist, and the grandson of Xiang Yan, a famous Chu State.
Xiang Yu studied books and swords when he was young, but he was a big branch of anti-Qin. In September of the first year of Qin Ershi (209 BC), it joined forces with Xiang Liang (now Suzhou, Jiangsu) in response to the Chen Sheng and Guangwu Uprising. After Chen Sheng's death, he led the main force of anti-Qin armed forces and made Xiong Xin, the grandson of Chu Huaiwang, king. When Zhang Han, the general of the Qin Dynasty, attacked Zhao, he was ordered to lead the army to save Zhao. Because Yi Song stayed put after he arrived in Anyang, he cut it in his tent, and then personally led the troops to save the stag, cross the rubicon, and defeated Qin Jun's main force.
In February 206 BC, he was enfeoffed as a vassal, with Liu Bang as Hanwang and self-reliance as the overlord of Western Chu, with Pengcheng (now Xuzhou, Jiangsu) as its capital. Soon, Zhao and other places rose up to rebel against Chu, and Liu Bang took the opportunity to pacify Sanqin and advanced on the western Chu, and the dispute between Chu and Han broke out. Although Xiang Yu won in the early stage of the war, the military situation became increasingly unfavorable due to the enfeoffment of vassals, internal contradictions and improper strategic decisions. Finally besieged, I heard Chu songs everywhere at night, thinking that the Han army had won Chu, so I broke through to Wujiang River and committed suicide.