释义 |
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—Mt Mang at Luoyang in Henan, with many Han, Wei and Jin dynasty royal tombs—Karakhan Dynasty of central Asia, 8th-10th century—Ling Mengchu (1580-1644), Ming dynasty novelist and dramatist—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-221 BC)—painter and poet of the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368)—Emperor Ming of Han (28-75), Western Han Dynasty Emperor 58-75—Li Huaiyuan (-756), senior Tang dynasty official—Qinqiang, an opera style popular in northwest China, possibly originating in Ming dynasty folk music—Wang Su (c. 195-256), classical scholar of Cao Wei dynasty, believed have forged several classical texts—Wu Zimu (lived c. 1270), writer at the end of the Song dynasty—Wu Ding (c. 14th century BC), legendary founder and wise ruler of Shang dynasty—central of the five Zhou dynasty royal academies—vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC) in the southeast of Shandong Province—Siku Quanshu (collection of books compiled during Qing dynasty)—Zhang Juzheng (1525-1582), Grand Secretary during the Ming dynasty, credited with bringing the dynasty its apogee—Great Sword Society, an offshoot of the White Lotus in the late Qing dynasty, involved in anti-Western activity at the time of the Boxer rebellion—Great Ancestor (posthumous title, e.g. for the founder of a dynasty)—Liao and Jin dynasties, namely: Liao or Khitan dynasty (907-1125) and Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234)—(from the Tang Dynasty onwards) term used by the emperor for his subjects (old)—Arirang 아리랑, famous Korean song of love and tragic separation, based on folk tale from Georyo dynasty—Qing Dynasty General Supervisory and Military Command—Xu Guangqi (1562–1633), agricultural scientist, astronomer, and mathematician in the Ming dynasty—the prehistoric Shang dynasty (c. 16th-11th century BC)—reign name (196-219) at the end of the Han dynasty—Lintun commandery (108 BC-c. 300 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—Cheng Miao, a jailer turned prisoner in the Jin dynasty who created the clerical style of Chinese calligraphy—landmark used during the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD)—Lu Yu (733-804), Chinese writer from Tang dynasty, known for his obsession with tea—Yuan Hongdao (1568-1610), Ming dynasty poet and travel writer—Wang Yucheng (954-1001) Song dynasty literary figure—name of vassal state of Zhou dynasty from 661 BC in Shanxi, one of the Seven Hero Warring States—Tang dynasty official with responsibility for animal husbandry—Manchu Khanate or kingdom that took over as Qing dynasty in 1644— |