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Yunxi and Zirang come to Dai together with the rest of the ladies-in-waiting sent by the Empress Dowager as gifts to Liu Heng. Qingning, Liu Heng's wife and the princess consort of Dai, is another spy sent by Empress Dowager Lü, but she fell in love with Liu Heng at first sight and sent fake information to protect him.
Dai Jianye (Chinese: 戴建业; born 1956) is a Chinese Classical literature researcher who is a professor at Central China Normal University. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Biography
When the Meiji government officially separated Shinto from Buddhism, official use of titles and terminology perceived as having Buddhist connotations such as (dai)myōjin, (dai)gongen or daibosatsu by shrines were legally abolished and discouraged. However, a few deities/shrines are still often referred to as (dai)myōjin in popular usage even ...
He calls physician trainees to become dancers when there is a special event. He is also Queen Dowager Jasun's relative. Royal Women. Park Jeong-sook as Queen Munjeong/Grand Dowager Queen Seongryeol - King Jungjong's 3rd wife, and Prince Gyeongwon's mother. Eom Yoo-shin as Queen Dowager Jasun - King Jungjong's mother and also a relative of ...
Kagura (神楽 (かぐら), "god-entertainment") is a type of Shinto ritual ceremonial dance. The term is a contraction of the phrase kami no kura ("seat of god"), indicating the presence of gods in the practice. One major function of kagura is chinkon (purifying and shaking the spirit), involving a procession-trance process.
Empress Dowager and one of the late Yongzheng Emperor's high-ranked imperial consorts. She is a pious Buddhist who prizes a stable empire above all and actively pursues a stable Imperial Harem, but also a force to be reckoned with. Adoptive mother to Hongli and birth mother to Princess Hean. Bai Shan: Lady Geng. 耿氏 Dowager Noble Consort Yu ...
Han Dynasty depiction of Yu. Yubu, translated as Pace(s) of Yu or Step(s) of Yu, is the basic mystic dance step of religious Daoism.This ancient walking or dancing technique typically involves dragging one foot after another, and is explained in reference to the legendary Yu the Great, who became lame on one side of his body from exerting himself while establishing order in the world after the ...
Feather Dance , as tribute to ancestral temples or the Gods of the Four Directions. Imperial Dance , performed as homage to the Gods of the Four Directions or as a rain dance. Yak-tail Banner Dance , performed at sacrificial sites in Biyong (辟雍), a seat of learning. Shield Dance (干舞), performed for military purpose or for the veneration ...