释义 |
Examples:Tang and Song dynasty provincial governor, in Tang times having military and civil authority, but only civil authority in Song—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—Li Huaiyuan (-756), senior Tang dynasty official—antique bronze mirror with flower petal edging, most commonly from the Tang dynasty—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—Xue Rengui (614-683) great Tang dynasty general—prefectural magistrate (during Tang Qing times)—Nanzhao, 8th and 9th century kingdom in Yunnan, at times allied with Tang against Tibetan Tubo pressure—Qian Qi (flourished c. 751), Tang Dynasty poet—Sima Chengzheng (655-735), Daoist priest in Tang dynasty—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—Huang Chao peasant uprising 875-884 in late Tang, led by Huang Chao—Five Dynasties (in different contexts, from mythology through Han and the interregnum between Han and Tang)—Huihe, pre-Tang name of ethnic group corresponding modern Uighur—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)—(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—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—Jianzhen or Ganjin (688-763), Tang dynastic Buddhist monk, who crossed Japan after several unsuccessful attempts, influential in Japanese Buddhism—seat of prefectural government (from Tang Qing times)—Wang Shichong (-621), general of late Sui and opponent of early Tang—Li Yuan (566-635), first Tang emperor Gaozu, reigned 618-626—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—General Wei Chigong (585-658), famous military man instrumental in founding the Tang dynasty—title of current dynasty (as the name of China), such as Tang or Ming— |