释义 |
Examples:Tripitaka (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—Xuanzang (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—Observatory or Bureau of Astronomy (official title) from the Tang dynasty onwards—pre-Tang names of the five notes of the pentatonic scale, corresponding roughly do, re, mi, sol, la—Tang Jiaxuan (1938-), politician and diplomat—the Indian subcontinent (esp. in Tang or Buddhist context)—Li Huaiyuan (-756), senior Tang dynasty official—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—Imperial Hanlin Academy, lasting from Tang dynasty until 1911—four-substance decoction (si wu tang), tonic formula used in Chinese medicine—early Tang literary style despised as shallow by the classicists—the Six Dynasties period (222-589) between Han and Tang—Li Fang (925-996), scholar between Tang and Song dynasties, author of fictional history—academy of classical learning (Tang Dynasty - Qing Dynasty)—rank of local governor in Tang dynasty administration—prefectural magistrate (during Tang Qing times)—Qian Qi (flourished c. 751), Tang Dynasty poet—Sima Chengzheng (655-735), Daoist priest in Tang dynasty—late Tang peasant uprising 875-884 led by Huang Chao—Princess Taiping (c. 665-713), Tang Dynasty princess, politically powerful and known for her beauty—An Lushan (703-757), famous general and favorite of Tang emperor Xuanzong, eventually precipitated catastrophic An Shi rebellion (755-763)—central Asian music (e.g. as appreciated by Tang literati)—Tang Shaoyi (1862-1939), politician and diplomat—Yang Ningshi (873-954) calligrapher of 5 dynasties period between Tang and Song—cultural movement aspiring study and emulate classic works, at different periods of history, esp. Tang and Song—Huang Chao peasant uprising 875-884 in late Tang, led by Huang Chao—Huihe, pre-Tang name of ethnic group corresponding modern Uighur—Tang Liang Hong (opposition candidate in Jan 1996 Singapore elections)—(from the Tang Dynasty onwards) term used by the emperor for his subjects (old)—Huang Chao (-884), leader of peasant uprising 875-884 in late Tang—Shang Tang (1646-? BC), legendary founder of the Shang Dynasty—Huangfu Bo (c. 800), Minister during early Tang—the Tang (618-907) and Song (960-1279) dynasties—seat of prefectural government (from Tang Qing times)—Zhangsun Wuji (c. 594-659), politician and historian of early Tang—Wang Shichong (-621), general of late Sui and opponent of early Tang—Meng Jiao (751-814), Tang dynasty essayist and poet—literary or theatrical form in Tang, Song and Yuan—Chinese middle antiquity, 3rd 9th centuries, including Sui and Tang Dynasties—Wu Zetian (624-705), Tang empress, reigned 690-705—classical Chinese as a literary model, esp. in Tang and Song prose—Hua Mulan, legendary woman warrior (c. fifth century), Northern dynasties folk hero recorded in Sui and Tang literature—honorific title during Tang Qing times, approx. "Glorious grand master"—General Wei Chigong (585-658), famous military man instrumental in founding the Tang dynasty—Di Renjie (607-700), Tang dynasty politician, prime minister under Wu Zetian, subsequently hero of legends—Li Zhao (c. 800), Tang dynasty scholar and official—title of current dynasty (as the name of China), such as Tang or Ming—Lu Yu (733-804), Chinese writer from Tang dynasty, known for his obsession with tea—any of three 10-day division of the month (during Tang dynasty)—Frank Chang-ting Hsieh (1946-), Taiwanese DPP politician, mayor of Kaohsiung 1998-2005—Tse Ting-Fung or Nicholas Tse (1980-), cantopop star—Guanting or Kuan-ting reservoir in Hebei, one of the main water reservoirs serving Beijing—Ye Ting (1896-1946), communist military leader— |