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Guo Shi 郭石: Rebel leader: Guo Shu 郭述: Julu County, Guangzong (Wei County, Hebei) Politician: Cao Wei: Guo Si / Guo Duo 郭汜/郭多: 197: Zhangye (Northwest of Zhangye, Gansu) General, politician, warlord: Guo Si: Dong Zhuo: Houhanshu vol. 72; Sanguozhi vol. 6. Guo Tai 國泰: Gai County, Le'an (Southeast of Yiyuan County, Shandong ...
3.112 郭林宗傳 Guo Linzong Zhuan: Biography of Guo Linzong: Biography of Guo Tai : 22.648 郭氏譜 Guo Shi Pu: Guo Family Genealogy: Records about Guo Huai and his family: 26.734 漢末名士錄 Han Mo Mingshi Lu: Records of Famous People of the Late Han Dynasty: 6.192 胡氏譜 Hu Shi Pu: Hu Family Genealogy: Records about Hu Zhi (胡質 ...
The Records of the Three Kingdoms is a Chinese official history written by Chen Shou in the late 3rd century CE, covering the end of the Han dynasty (c. 184 – 220 CE) and the subsequent Three Kingdoms period (220–280 CE).
Tai Le script", WG2 (Singapore) Resolution Consent Docket for UTC L2/01-405R Moore, Lisa (2001-12-12), "Consensus 89-C21", Minutes from the UTC/L2 meeting in Mountain View, November 6-9, 2001 , The UTC accepts the encoding of the Tai Le collection of characters with names (TAI LE LETTER..) and code points (1950..196D, 1970..1974) as described ...
Guotai (given name), also in the form of Kowk Tai, Kok Thay Guo Tai [] (Chinese: 郭泰, aka 郭太), a Chinese scholar-official of Eastern Han dynasty; Shen Zujian [Wikidata] Qing dynasty Chinese people, also known as his alternative name Guotai (Chinese: 果臺; pinyin: Guǒtái)
Lü Bu, in turn, was attacked by Dong Zhuo's former officers: Li Jue, Guo Si, Zhang Ji and Fan Chou. Wang Yun and his whole family were executed. Wang Yun and his whole family were executed. Lü Bu fled to Zhang Yang , a northern warlord, and remained with him for a time before briefly joining Yuan Shao, but it was clear that Lü Bu was far too ...
The eponymous title Baopuzi derives from Ge Hong's hao (號), the hao being a type of sobriquet or pseudonym. Baopuzi literally means "The Master Who Embraces Simplicity;" [1] compounded from the words bao meaning "embrace; hug; carry; hold in both arms; cherish"; pu meaning "uncarved wood", also being a Taoist metaphor for a "person's original nature; simple; plain"; and, zi meaning "child ...
The Tale of Li Wa by Bai Xingjian, translated as The Story of Miss Li by Arthur Waley in More Translations from the Chinese (Alfred A. Knopf, 1919) The Tale of Liu Yi , translated as The Dragon King's Daughter by Yang Xianyi and Gladys Yang in The Dragon King's Daughter: Ten Tang Dynasty Stories (Foreign Languages Press, 1954)