释义 |
Examples:Bhumibol Adulyadej (1927-), King of Thailand (reigned 1945-)—Sejong the Great or Sejong Daewang (1397-1450), reigned 1418-1450 as fourth king of Joseon or Chosun dynasty, in whose reign the hangeul alphabet was invented—Shāh Ismāil I (1487-1524), founder of Persian Safavid dynasty, reigned 1501-1524—King Taejong of Joseon Korea (1367-1422), reigned 1400-1418—Liu Heng (202-157 BC), the fourth Han emperor Han Wendi, reigned 180-157 BC—Wang Mang (45 BC-23 AD), usurped power and reigned 9-23 between the former and later Han—Fulin Emperor Shunzhi (1638-1662), second Qing emperor, reigned 1644-1662—reign name of second Ming emperor, reigned 1398-1402, deposed in 1402 (mysterious disappearance is ongoing conspiracy theory)—ASHIKAGA Yoshimasa (1435-1490), eighth Ashikaga shōgun, reigned 1449-1473—Liu Bang (256 or 247-195 BC), first Han emperor, reigned 207-195 BC—King Xuan, eleventh King of Zhou, reigned (828-782 BC)—Wenzong Emperor, reign name of Yuan Dynasty emperor Tugh Temür (1304-1332), reigned 1328-1332—Empress Dowager Cixi or Ts'u Hsi (reigned 1861-1908)—lit. progenitor of the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368), title of Khubilai Khan (1215-1294), first Yuan dynasty emperor, reigned 1260-1294—King Wu of Zhou, personal name Ji Fa, reigned 1046-1043 BC as first king of Western Zhou dynasty 1046-1043 BC—Pu Yi, personal name of the last Qing emperor (reigned as child 1909-1911), the subject of Bertolucci's biopic The Last Emperor—Emperor Xuan (91-48 BC) of the Former Han Dynasty, reigned 74-48 BC—Khufu (Pharoah, reigned possibly 2590-2568 BC)—Emperor Yang of Sui (569-618), said have murdered his father and brother to seize the throne, reigned 604-618—Queen Victoria (reigned 1837-1901)—Queen Victoria (1819-1901), reigned 1837-1901—Li Yuan (566-635), first Tang emperor Gaozu, reigned 618-626—later King Huai of Chu (reigned 208-205 BC)—King Mu, fifth king of Zhou, said have lived to 105 and reigned 976-922 BC or 1001-947 BC, rich in associated mythology—Wu Zetian (624-705), Tang empress, reigned 690-705—Qianlong or Ch'ien-lung, emperor of the Qing dynasty, reigned sixty years (1735-1796)—Yellow Emperor, mythological emperor of China, reigned c. 2697-2597 BC—King Xuan of Qi (reigned 342-324 BC)—ASHIKAGA Yoshimitsu (1358-1408), third Ashikaga shōgun, reigned 1368-1394—Yoshihito, personal name of Japanese emperor Taishō emperor (1879-1926), reigned 1912-1926—King Helu of Wu (-496 BC, reigned 514-496 BC)—first Sui emperor (541-604) Yang Jian (541-604), reigned 581-604—reign name of Ming emperor (1573-1619)—Three feudatories rebellion against Qing 1673-1681 during the reign of Kangxi—used instead of reign name by the nationalist government, then by Taiwan—era name (subdivision in the reign of an emperor)—Yongzheng, reign name of Qing emperor (1722-1735)—Showa, reign name of Emperor Hirohiof Japan 1925-1989—reign name of Qing emperor (1821-1850)—used in PRC as reign name of a former dynasty—reign name of Qing emperor (1850-1861)—Meiwa (Japanese reign name 1764-1772)—reign name of second Qing emperor (1644-1662)—Jiaqing, reign name of Qing emperor (1796-1820)—Antei (Japanese reign name, 1227-1229)—change an emperor's or ruler's reign title (old)—Meiji (Japanese reign name 1868-1912)—Maximilien François Marie Isidore de Robespierre (1758-1794), French revolutionary leader, enthusiastic advocate of reign of terror 1791-1794—first year of Emperor's reign—reign name (196-219) at the end of the Han dynasty—Heisei, reign name of Japanese Emperor Akihito, from 1989—reign name of Qing emperor (1861-1875)—reign name of penultimate Qing emperor Guangxu or Guang-hsu (1875-1908)—reign (of a king, emperor etc)—Jacobin club, French revolutionary party that played a leading role in the reign of terror 1791-1794—Chongzhen, reign name of last Ming emperor (1628-1644)— |