释义 |
dynasty noun—朝 n (often used) ()王朝 n ()代 n ()Examples:Hundred Days Reform (1898), failed attempt reform the Qing dynasty—Tripitaka (602-664) Tang dynasty Buddhist monk and translator, who traveled India 629-645—late Warring States period, c. 250-221 BC before the First Emperor's Qin Dynasty—Hualinbu, Ming dynasty theatrical troupe in Nanjing—Shāh Ismāil I (1487-1524), founder of Persian Safavid dynasty, reigned 1501-1524—painter and poet of the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368)—Minister of Revenue (from the Han dynasty onwards)—envoy charge with promoting agriculture (in Han dynasty)—Emperor Ming of Han (28-75), Western Han Dynasty Emperor 58-75—Zhou Dun'yi (1017-1073), Song dynasty neo-Confucian scholar—Bayan of the Merkid (-1340), Yuan dynasty general and politician—Yi Seong-gye (1335-1408), founder and first king of Korean Yi dynasty (1392-1910)—central of the five Zhou dynasty royal academies—King Wu of Zhou, personal name Ji Fa, reigned 1046-1043 BC as first king of Western Zhou dynasty 1046-1043 BC—Liao and Jin dynasties, namely: Liao or Khitan dynasty (907-1125) and Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234)—imperial bulletin, palace report dating back Han dynasty—Wen Tianxiang (1236-1283), Song dynasty politician and poet, folk hero in resisting Mongol invasion in Jiangxi in 1275—Zhenpan commandery (108 BC-c. 300 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—Mawangdui in Changsha, Hunan, a recent Han dynasty archaeological site—Song dynasty history of Zen Buddhism in China (1252), 20 scrolls—booming and golden age of Qing dynasty (from Kang Xi Qian Long emperors)—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)—Ever Victorious Army (1860-1864), Qing dynasty army equipped and trained jointly with Europeans and used esp. against the Taiping rebels—the Qing dynasty equivalent of the Foreign Office—Office of Military and Political Affairs (Qing Dynasty)—Dadu, capital of China during the Yuan Dynasty (1280-1368), modern day Beijing—Yumen Pass, or Jade Gate, western frontier post on the Silk Road in the Han Dynasty, west of Dunhuang, in Gansu—Di Renjie (607-700), Tang dynasty politician, prime minister under Wu Zetian, subsequently hero of legends—princess (loanword from Manchu, used in the Qing Dynasty)—modern history (for China, from the Opium Wars until the fall of the Qing Dynasty, i.e. mid-19th early 20th century)—Wang Qinruo (962-1025), Northern Song dynasty official—Cheng Miao, a jailer turned prisoner in the Jin dynasty who created the clerical style of Chinese calligraphy—Wuchang Uprising of October 10th, 1911, which led Sun Yat-sen's Xinhai Revolution and the fall of the Qing dynasty—Ba state during Zhou dynasty (in east of modern Sichuan)—Tang dynasty official with responsibility for animal husbandry— |