释义 |
Examples:Karakhan Dynasty of central Asia, 8th-10th century—Nanzhao, 8th and 9th century kingdom in Yunnan, at times allied with Tang against Tibetan Tubo pressure—Yama(possibly 3rd century AD), Japanese state before written records began in 7th century AD, its real dating is controversial—Niya, ancient kingdom near Khotan in Xinjiang, 1st century BC-4th century AD—Japanese pirates (in 16th and 17th century)—Japanese Warring States period (15th-17th century)—Chinese middle antiquity, 3rd 9th centuries, including Sui and Tang Dynasties—name for the silver coin and the main currency in Bohemia from 16th-18th century—the prehistoric Shang dynasty (c. 16th-11th century BC)—Guoyu, book of historical narrative c. 10th-5th century BC—oracle inscriptions of the Shang Dynasty (16th-11th century BC) on tortoiseshells or animal bones—modern history (for China, from the Opium Wars until the fall of the Qing Dynasty, i.e. mid-19th early 20th century)—Chinese term for Cambodia from 7th 15th century—Sassanid Empire of Persia (c. 2nd-7th century AD)—Futurism (artistic and social movement of the 20th century)—Emperor Xin, last ruler of Shang (11th Century BC), famous as a tyrant—treaty port, forced on Qing China by the 19th century Great Powers—Wu Ding (c. 14th century BC), legendary founder and wise ruler of Shang dynasty—the Twenty-Four Histories (25 or 26 in modern editions), collection of books on Chinese dynastic history from 3000 BC till 17th century—Thousand Character Classic, 6th century poem used as a traditional reading primer—Tunmi Sanghuzha (6th century AD), originator of the Tibetan script—silly talk or "mo lei tau" (Cantonese), genre of humor emerging from Hong Kong late in the 20th century—invade China (referring to 19th century imperialist powers and Japan)—Chao Phya Phra Klang, 18th century Thai politician and writer—Willow palisade across Liaoning, 17th century barrier—Guangyun, Chinese rime dictionary from 11th century, containing 26,194 single-character entries—Fu Shuo (c. 14th century BC), legendary sage and principal minister of Shang ruler Wu Ding—old tea-horse road or southern Silk Road, dating back 6th century, from Tibet and Sichuan through Yunnan and Southeast Asia, reaching to Bhutan, Sikkim, India and beyond—Asakusa, district of Tokyo with an atmosphere of old Japan, famous for the 7th century Buddhist temple, Sensō-ji—Luo Maodeng (16th century), Ming author of operas and popular fiction—Three character classic, a 13th century reading primer consisting of Confucian tenets in lines of 3 characters—Zhou Xin (c. 11th century BC), last emperor of the of Shang Dynasty—Jiyun, Chinese rime dictionary with 53,525 single-character entries, published in 11th century—Marc Aurel Stein (1862-1943), British adventurer and archaeologist who explorer Xinjiang in early 20th century—Yang Shouren (16th century), Ming dynasty scholar— |