释义 |
Examples:the Grand canal, 1800 km from Beijing Hangzhou, built starting from 486 BC—King Helu of Wu (-496 BC, reigned 514-496 BC)—Siddhartha Gautama (563-485 BC), the historical Buddha and founder of Buddhism—Tangun, legendary founder of Korea in 2333 BC—Aristophanes (c. 448-380 BC), Greek comic playwright—Philistine (Palestinian people, reputedly uncircumcised, c. 1,000 BC)—Euripides (c. 480-406 BC), Greek tragedian, author of Medea, Trojan Women etc—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-221 BC)—ruins of capital city of King Helu of Wu, from 6th century BC, at modern Wuxi, Jiangsu—four Han commanderies in north Korea 108 BC-c. 300 AD—Three Sovereigns, between Gods and Emperors in third millennium BC—King Xuan, eleventh King of Zhou, reigned (828-782 BC)—the Hundred Schools of Thought, the various schools of thought and their exponents during the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods (770-220 BC)—Lelang commandery (108 BC-313 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC) in the southeast of Shandong Province—King Wu of Zhou, personal name Ji Fa, reigned 1046-1043 BC as first king of Western Zhou dynasty 1046-1043 BC—Aeschylus (c. 524 BC -c. 455 BC), Greek tragedian, author of The Persians, Seven against Thebes etc—Wen Zhong (-467 BC), adviser the state of Yue during Spring and Autumn period—Zoroaster, Zarathustra or Zarathushtra (c. 1200 BC), Persian prophet and founder of Zoroastrianism—a hundred schools of thought contend (idiom); refers the classical philosophic schools of the Warring States period 475-221 BC—Haojing (in modern Shaanxi, northwest of Chang'an county), capital of Western Zhou from c. 1050 BC—Chu Ci, the Songs of Chu (ancient book of poems, collected during Han but esp. from country of Chu c. 500 BC)—Jia Yi (200-168 BC), Chinese poet and statesman of the Western Han Dynasty—Lord Menchang of Qi, Chancellor of Qi and of Wei during the Warring States Period (475-221 BC)—Bamboo Annals, early chronicle of Chinese ancient history, written c. 300 BC—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC)—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1066-221 BC), located in present day Henan and Hebei Provinces—Paekche or Baekje (18 BC-660 AD), one of the Korean Three Kingdoms—Pisistratus (-528 BC), tyrant (ruler) of Athens at different times between 561 BC and 528 BC—Fu Shuo (c. 14th century BC), legendary sage and principal minister of Shang ruler Wu Ding—Fan Li (536-488 BC), politician of Yue state, businessman and economist—Fuxi or Fu Hsi, legendary Chinese emperor, trad. 2852-2738 BC, mythical creator of fishing, trapping and writing—"Erya" or "The Ready Guide", first extant Chinese dictionary, c. 3rd century BC, with glossaries on classical texts—oracle inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty (16th-11th century BC) on tortoiseshells or animal bones—Classic of Mountain and Sea, probably compiled c. 500 BC-200 BC, contains wide range of geography, mythology, witchcraft, popular customs etc—Asa (?-870 BC), third king of Judah and fifth king of the House of David (Judaism)—Zhengguo canal, a 150 km long irrigation canal in Shaanxi built in 264 BC—Imperial College of Supreme Learning, established in 124 BC, and the highest educational institute in ancient China until the Sui Dynasty—Scipio Africanus (235-183 BC), Roman general and statesman— |