释义 |
Examples:Mt Mang at Luoyang in Henan, with many Han, Wei and Jin dynasty royal tombs—Wang Mang (45 BC-23 AD), usurped power and reigned 9-23 between the former and later Han—lit. visit a tomb on Mt Mang—Taku Forts, maritime defense works in Tianjin dating back the Ming dynasty, playing a prominent role during the Opium Wars (1839-1860)—Jinpingmei or the Golden Lotus (1617), Ming dynasty vernacular novel, formerly notorious and banned for its sexual content—Ling Mengchu (1580-1644), Ming dynasty novelist and dramatist—Feng Doubo or Feng Wu (1672-), calligrapher of the Ming-Qing transition—Hualinbu, Ming dynasty theatrical troupe in Nanjing—Green Standard Army, standing infantry during Qing dynasty, originally formed from Ming and other Chinese army units—Green standard army, standing infantry during Qing dynasty, originally formed from Ming and other Chinese army units—Western (or Western-style) cannon of the Ming era—Wang Daiyu (1584-1670), Hui Islamic scholar of the Ming-Qing transition—xiaolian, two examination subjects in Han, later a single subject in Ming and Qing—official seal (esp. military seal during Qing and Ming times)—Pei Ieoh Ming or I.M. Pei (1917-), famous Chinese-American architect—reign name of second Ming emperor, reigned 1398-1402, deposed in 1402 (mysterious disappearance is ongoing conspiracy theory)—Song Lian (1310-1381), Ming dynasty writer, historian and politician—Western (and so styled) cannon of the Ming era—candidate who ranked 1st in imperial examination on prefecture or county level (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—Li Yu (1611-c. 1680), late Ming and early Qing writer and dramatist—inspector-general of province in Ming and Qing times—the triennial provincial imperial exam during the Ming and Qing—Hubei and Hunan provinces (a Ming dynasty province)—supervisor of textiles (official post in Ming dynasty)—autumn trial (judicial hearing of capital cases during Ming and Qing)—Imperial scholar from the Ming Dynasty onwards—Chen Renxi (1581-1636), late Ming scholar and prolific author—Li Zhi (1527-1602), late Ming philosopher, historian and writer—the Ming dynasty provincial headquarters in the Heilongjiang and Vladivostok area—Nanyuan or "Southern Park", an imperial hunting domain during the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, now the site of Nanhaizi Park in the south of Beijing—Wei Zhongxian (1568-1627), infamous eunuch politician of late Ming—Xu Guangqi (1562–1633), agricultural scientist, astronomer, and mathematician in the Ming dynasty—Luo Maodeng (16th century), Ming author of operas and popular fiction—Li ZiCheng (1605-1645), leader of peasant rebellion at the end of the Ming Dynasty—Purple Mountain in suburbs of Nanjing, with Ming tombs and Sun Yat-sen's mausoleum—provincial imperial examination graduate who ranked 1st in metropolitan examination (in Ming and Qing dynasties)—Zhang Yi (1608-1695), prolific author and poet spanning interregnum between Ming and Qing—Yang Shouren (16th century), Ming dynasty scholar—Yuan Hongdao (1568-1610), Ming dynasty poet and travel writer—Ming dynasty record (1574) of exploration and foreign relations— |