释义 |
Examples:the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—the army of Yellow Turbans, a peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—the crisis year of 1900 involving the Boxer uprising and the eight nation military invasion—Nanchang Uprising, 1st August 1927, the beginning of military revolt by the Communists in the Chinese Civil War—late Tang peasant uprising 875-884 led by Huang Chao—a Qing prince who was the designated successor emperor Guangxu until the Boxer uprising—Huanghuagang uprising of 23rd April 1911 in Guangzhou, one a long series of unsuccessful uprisings of Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary party—Huang Chao peasant uprising 875-884 in late Tang, led by Huang Chao—refers the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—a street the south of the Forbidden City that was the Legation quarter during the Boxer uprising—Huang Chao (-884), leader of peasant uprising 875-884 in late Tang—fig. crisis (e.g. revolution, uprising, financial crisis etc)—Tsugiyama Akira, secretary at the Japanese legation killed during the Boxer uprising—the seventy two martyrs of the Huanghuagang uprising of 23rd April 1911—protocol of Beijing of 1901 ending the Eight-power allied force intervention after the Boxer uprising—Klemens Freiherr von Ketteler, German minister killed during the Boxer uprising—Wuchang Uprising of October 10th, 1911, which led Sun Yat-sen's Xinhai Revolution and the fall of the Qing dynasty—Huanghuagang (Chrysanthemum Hill) in Guangzhou, scene of disastrous uprising of 23rd April 1911—Paris Commune 1871, an unsuccessful proletarian uprising against the French Third Republic—meet as volunteers for an uprising—Shanghai incident of 28th January 1932, Chinese uprising against Japanese quarters of Shanghai—an uprising is afoot [idiom.]—Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)— |