释义 |
Examples:National protection war or Campaign defend the republic (1915), a rebellion against the installation of Yuan Shikai as emperor—Hunan army, irregular force formed in 1850s fight the Taiping heavenly kingdom rebellion—Three feudatories rebellion against Qing 1673-1681 during the reign of Kangxi—tell fox ghost stories around a bonfire and incite rebellion—the whole country in rebellion—Dagger Society, anti-Qing secret society who mounted an unsuccessful rebellion in 1855—a government official drives the people revolt (idiom); a minister provokes a rebellion by exploiting the people—the crime of armed rebellion—Hong Xiuquan or Hung Hsiu-ch'üan (1812-1864), leader of the Taiping rebellion or Taiping Heavenly Kingdom—suppress rebellion and quell unrest—rebellion against the Qing of 1670s, pacified by Kangxi—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—An Lushan (703-757), famous general and favorite of Tang emperor Xuanzong, eventually precipitated catastrophic An Shi rebellion (755-763)—place in Hubei, the starting point for a major rebellion at the end of Western Han—Zhu Hongdeng, one of the leaders of the Boxer Rebellion—National protection army of 1915 (in rebellion against Yuan Shikai)—instigate (rebellion etc)—local militia formed suppress peasant rebellion (old)—Yemelyan Ivanovich Pugachov (1742-1775), Russian Cossack, leader of peasant rebellion 1773-1775 against Catherine the Great—plot (a rebellion, crime etc)—Li ZiCheng (1605-1645), leader of peasant rebellion at the end of the Ming Dynasty—Support the Qing, annihilate the West! (Boxer rebellion slogan)—Campaign defend the republic (1915) or National protection war, a rebellion against the installation of Yuan Shikai as emperor—a form of transit taxation in China introduced finance armies to suppress the Taiping Rebellion—the Red Turbans, peasant rebellion at the end of the Yuan dynasty— |