释义 |
Examples:Liu Heng (202-157 BC), the fourth Han emperor Han Wendi, reigned 180-157 BC—Emperor Ming of Han (28-75), Western Han Dynasty Emperor 58-75—Shu Han (c. 200-263), Liu Bei's kingdom in Sichuan during the Three Kingdoms, claiming legitimacy as successor of Han—seal script used throughout the pre-Han period—the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—former Han dynasty school of Confucian scholars—Su Wu (140-60 BC), Han Dynasty diplomat and statesman, regarded as a model of courage and faithful service—Minister of Revenue (from the Han dynasty onwards)—ancient place name (a Han dynasty town in Shaanxi)—non-Han tribes in the east and north of ancient China—xiaolian, two examination subjects in Han, later a single subject in Ming and Qing—Ten Permanent Functionaries at the end of Han, a byword for corruption—Yuan Shao (153-202), general during late Han, subsequently warlord—late Han and early Wei (roughly, first half of 3rd century AD)—Sun Jian (155-191), famous general at end of Han dynasty, forerunner of the southern kingdom of Wu of the Three Kingdoms—imperial bulletin, palace report dating back Han dynasty—Dong Zhongshu (179-104 BC), philosopher influential in establishing Confucianism as the established system of values of former Han dynasty—Mawangdui in Changsha, Hunan, a recent Han dynasty archaeological site—Jia Yi (200-168 BC), Chinese poet and statesman of the Western Han Dynasty—Zhu Jun (-195), politician and general at the end of later Han—refers the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—official post of minister of war in pre-han Chinese states—Zhang Chang, official and scholar of the Eastern Han dynasty—Sun Ce (175-200), general and major warlord of the Later Han Dynasty—Zhang Qian (-114 BC), Han dynasty explorer of 2nd century BC—han, a province under a feudal overlord in premodern Japan—divination combined with mystical Confucian philosopy, prevalent during the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220)—candidate who came third in the Han-lin examination—the Qin (221-207 BC) and Han (206 BC-220 AD) dynasties—Han Seung Soo (1936-), South Korean diplomat and politician, prime minister from 2008—interactions between heaven and mankind (Han Dynasty doctrine)—Lintun commandery (108 BC-c. 300 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—Liu Xiang (77-6 BC), Han Dynasty scholar and author—black dwarf (pejorative term for non-Han people)—lit. rich country, strong army (idiom); slogan of legalist philosophers in pre-Han times—(in Taiwan) Han Chinese people other than those who moved Taiwan from mainland China after 1945 and their descendants—Hakka ethnic group (Han Chinese migrants from north south China)—formal wife of a Xiongnu chief during the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD)—Ban Chao (33-102), noted Han diplomat and military man— |