释义 |
Tang dynasty (618-907)—唐 (almost always used) 唐朝 唐代 the Tang dynasty (618-907)—Examples:Du Mu (803-852) Tang dynasty poet—Observatory or Bureau of Astronomy (official title) from the Tang dynasty onwards—Wan Qirong (active c. 711), Tang dynasty poet—the last years of the Tang dynasty—Li Huaiyuan (-756), senior Tang dynasty official—antique bronze mirror with flower petal edging, most commonly from the Tang dynasty—Imperial Hanlin Academy, lasting from Tang dynasty until 1911—Meng Haoran (689-740), Tang Dynasty Poet—academy of classical learning (Tang Dynasty - Qing Dynasty)—rank of local governor in Tang dynasty administration—Xue Rengui (614-683) great Tang dynasty general—He Zhizhang (659-744), Tang dynasty poet—Wei Yinwu (737-792), Tang dynasty poet—Qian Qi (flourished c. 751), Tang Dynasty poet—Sima Chengzheng (655-735), Daoist priest in Tang dynasty—Princess Taiping (c. 665-713), Tang Dynasty princess, politically powerful and known for her beauty—Tang dynasty compendium of herbal medicine—Lü Yan (lived c. 874), Tang dynasty poet—Zhang Ji (767-830), Tang Dynasty poet—a popular form of narrative literature flourishing in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) with alternate prose and rhymed parts for recitation and singing (often on Buddhist themes)—He Chao (active c. 711), Tang dynasty poet—(from the Tang Dynasty onwards) term used by the emperor for his subjects (old)—Yan Zhenqing (709-785), a leading calligrapher of the Tang Dynasty—Du Fu (712-770), great Tang dynasty poet—Wang Wei (701-761), Tang Dynasty poet—Meng Jiao (751-814), Tang dynasty essayist and poet—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—name of a famous Tang dynasty wine—Lu Yu (733-804), Chinese writer from Tang dynasty, known for his obsession with tea—Li Bai (701-762), famous Tang Dynasty poet—Tang dynasty official with responsibility for animal husbandry—any of three 10-day division of the month (during Tang dynasty)—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—Shang Tang (1646-? BC), legendary founder of the Shang Dynasty—Tang and Song dynasty provincial governor, in Tang times having military and civil authority, but only civil authority in Song—title of current dynasty (as the name of China), such as Tang or Ming— |