Qin Shi Huang was the first emperor of China and established the Qin dynasty, which lasted from 221BCE-207BCE (Travel China Guide, 1998-2015). Qin Hi Shuang was one of the greatest emperors of China, creating many of the significant monuments we know China for today, but he was also one of the most tyrannic and cruelest. He killed his brothers to make sure that he would always be emperor (Travel Guide China,1998-2015) and embarked on mammoth projects for self serving reasons. The projects, such as the Great Wall of China and the Terra Cotta Army, were of an immense scale and were made at great human cost (HubPages, 2014). He also buried alive 400 to 700 scholars because he wanted to suppress philosophy and creativity as he knew this would lead to people having a different opinion to him (Carrie Gracie BBC, 2012). His decisions were brash and those of someone very insecure. I strongly believe that Qin Hi Shuang had a brazen, arrogant approach to leading and was therefore a bad emperor for Ancient China. …show more content…
He believed that any thoughts different from his were considered 'bad'. He buried over 600 scholars and burnt thousands of books (Carrie Gracie BBC-2012). This event caused the loss of many philosophical treatises from the Hundred Schools Of Thought, a philosophy school (China Culture-2003 ). Qin Hi Shuang saw philosophical minds as a threat to his leadership and later in his life, paranoia took over and his idea of becoming 'the immortal king' more greatly influenced his actions and decisions. Qin Hi Shuang's approach to ruling was selfish, his only thought when making great decisions was for self