释义 |
Qing dynasty proper noun, singular—Examples:the (great) Ch'ing or Qing dynasty (1644-1911)—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—the Manchu khanate or kingdom that took over as the Qing dynasty in 1644—the final years of the Ch'ing or Qing dynasty—Historical name for Portugal during the Qing dynasty—Manchurian Qing (refers the Qing dynasty, esp. at its decline, or as an anti-Qing slogan)—Privy Council during the Qing dynasty—academy of classical learning (Tang Dynasty - Qing Dynasty)—Biographic history of Qing dynasty by a succession of authors, published 1928 and revised 1987, with biographies of 2,900 notable Qing commoner citizens, 80 scrolls—Siku Quanshu (collection of books compiled during Qing dynasty)—Great Sword Society, an offshoot of the White Lotus in the late Qing dynasty, involved in anti-Western activity at the time of the Boxer rebellion—Xiao Yishan (1902-1978), Modern historian of the Qing dynasty—Gao Xiang (1688-1753), Qing dynasty painter—office set up in 1914 compile official history of the Qing dynasty—the Manchu Han imperial feast, a legendary banquet in the Qing dynasty—Xinhai Revolution (1911), which ended the Qing Dynasty—in Qing dynasty, Manchurian word for wife—state provincial warehouse (esp. during Qing dynasty)—Ming and Qing dynasty province directly administered by Beijing, including Beijing, Tianjin, most of Hebei and Henan and part of Shandong—Ming or Qing dynasty school—Chen Gongyin (1631-1700), early Qing dynasty poet—Western learning from the late Qing dynasty—booming and golden age of Qing dynasty (from Kang Xi Qian Long emperors)—Ever Victorious Army (1860-1864), Qing dynasty army equipped and trained jointly with Europeans and used esp. against the Taiping rebels—the Qing dynasty equivalent of the Foreign Office—Office of Military and Political Affairs (Qing Dynasty)—Qing Dynasty General Supervisory and Military Command—low-level officer of the army from the Ming the mid Qing Dynasty—Robert Hart (1835-1911), Englishman who served 1863-1911 in Qing dynasty customs office—the Qing Dynasty name for the coastal provinces of Liaoning, Hebei, and Shandong—extra allowances paid government officials in the Qing dynasty—Qianlong or Ch'ien-lung, emperor of the Qing dynasty, reigned sixty years (1735-1796)—cap badge (official sign of rank in Qing dynasty)—Fuzhou Naval College, a.k.a. Foochow Naval Dockyard School, set up in 1866 by the Qing dynasty—princess (loanword from Manchu, used in the Qing Dynasty)—Luo Shichang, Qing dynasty painter—the Other List (Qing dynasty register of outlaws)—Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Qing Dynasty—Rehe, Qing dynasty province abolished in 1955 and divided among Hebei, Liaoning and Inner Mongolia—Heshen (1746-1799), Manchu official of the Qing Dynasty who openly practiced various forms of corruption on a grand scale—name of Qing dynasty province covering south Jiangsu, south Anhui and north Zhejiang provinces, with capital at Nanjing—Manchu Khanate or kingdom that took over as Qing dynasty in 1644—Hundred Days Reform (1898), failed attempt reform the Qing dynasty— |