释义 |
Examples:Shu Han (c. 200-263), Liu Bei's kingdom in Sichuan during the Three Kingdoms, claiming legitimacy as successor of Han—Mt Mang at Luoyang in Henan, with many Han, Wei and Jin dynasty royal tombs—seal script used throughout the pre-Han period—the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—the breakup of the Han dynasty around 200 AD—Sixteen Kingdoms of five non-Han people (ruling most of China 304-439)—live in Cao camp but have the heart in Han camp (idiom.)—ancient place name (a Han dynasty town in Shaanxi)—Hua Tuo (c. 140–208), ancient Chinese physician from the Eastern Han period—Han of the Five dynasties (951-979), one of ten kingdoms during the Five Dynasties, Ten Kingdoms period (907-960)—Han Aijing (1945-), notorious red guard leader during Cultural Revolution, spent 15 years in prison for imprisoning and torturing political leaders—Hua Tuo (?-208), famous doctor at the end of Han Dynasty—non-Han tribes in the east and north of ancient China—Liu Bang (256 or 247-195 BC), first Han emperor, reigned 207-195 BC—four Han commanderies in north Korea 108 BC-c. 300 AD—late Han and early Wei (roughly, first half of 3rd century AD)—generic name for northern ethnic minorities during the Qin and Han Dynasties (221 BC-220 AD)—refers the philosophical schools of pre-Han China—Emperor Xuan (91-48 BC) of the Former Han Dynasty, reigned 74-48 BC—the Manchu Han imperial feast, a legendary banquet in the Qing dynasty—Dong Zhongshu (179-104 BC), philosopher influential in establishing Confucianism as the established system of values of former Han dynasty—Eastern Barbarians, non-Han tribe living the east of China c 2200 BC—Mawangdui in Changsha, Hunan, a recent Han dynasty archaeological site—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—refers the Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)—Xuantu commandery (108 BC-c. 300 AD), one of four Han dynasty commanderies in north Korea—Sun Ce (175-200), general and major warlord of the Later Han Dynasty—Zhang Qian (-114 BC), Han dynasty explorer of 2nd century BC—Xiping steles, calligraphic work on carved steles of the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220 AD)—common term for non-Han peoples in former times, not exclusively derogatory—Han Seung Soo (1936-), South Korean diplomat and politician, prime minister from 2008—reign name (196-219) at the end of the Han dynasty—bamboo slip used for record keeping during the Han Dynasty—Marquis (highest Han dynasty ducal title meaning lord of 10,000 households)—pipe wind instrument introduced from the non-Han peoples in the North and West—Hakka ethnic group (Han Chinese migrants from north south China)—Yellow Turbans peasant uprising at the end of later Han (from 184)— |