释义 |
Examples:Mt Mang at Luoyang in Henan, with many Han, Wei and Jin dynasty royal tombs—the Later Jin dynasty (from 1616-)—Western Jin dynasty (265-316)—army (used during the Liao, Jin and Yuan dynasties)—Tao Yuanming (c. 365-427), Jin dynasty writer and poet—Later Jin of the Five Dynasties (936-946)—Wei, Jin and North-South dynasties—Jin Mao Tower, skyscraper in Shanghai—Sima Yi (179-251), warlord under Cao Cao and subsequently founder of the Jin dynasty—Liao and Jin dynasties, namely: Liao or Khitan dynasty (907-1125) and Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234)—Tianjin World Financial Center, skyscraper a.k.a. the Tianjin Tower or Jin Tower—the Jin Dynasties (265-420)—Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234)—Qiu Jin (1875-1907), famous female martyr of the anti-Qing revolution, the subject of several books and films—Huan Xuan (369-404), general involved in the break-up of Eastern Jin—Zhang Hua (232-300), Western Jin writer, poet and politician—Zhongdu, capital of China during the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234), modern day Beijing—Zuo Si (3rd century), Jin dynasty writer and poet—Eastern Jin dynasty 317-420—Zhou Chu (236-297), Jin dynasty general—Wei (220-265) and Jin (265-420) dynasties—Wei and Jin philosophical school amalgamating Daoist and Confucian ideals—Cheng Miao, a jailer turned prisoner in the Jin dynasty who created the clerical style of Chinese calligraphy—capital of the Jin State during the Spring and Autumn Period (770-475 BC)—Chinese unit of weight equal 100 jin (or 50 kg)—Later Jin dynasty (from 1616-)— |