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The White Lotus Rebellion (Chinese: 川 楚 白 蓮 教 起 義; pinyin: Chuān chŭ bái lián jiào qǐ yì, 1794–1804) was a rebellion initiated by followers of the White Lotus movement during the Qing dynasty of China.
Lin Qing, head of the sect and leader of the uprising. The Eight Trigrams uprising of 1813 (Chinese: 癸酉之變) broke out in China under the Qing dynasty.The rebellion was started by some elements of the millenarian Tianli Sect (天理教) or Heavenly Principle Sect, which was a branch of the White Lotus Sect.
The Eight Trigrams uprising of 1813 broke out in China under the Qing dynasty. The rebellion was started by some elements of the millenarian Tianli Sect (天理教) or Heavenly Principle Sect, which was a branch of the White Lotus Sect. Led by Lin Qing (林清; 1770–1813) and Li Wencheng, the revolt occurred in the Zhili, Shandong, and Henan ...
Wang Cong'er (Chinese: 王 聰 兒; pinyin: Wáng Cōng'ér, c. 1777–1798) was a female Chinese leader of anti-Manchu White Lotus Rebellion along with Wang Nangxian during the reign of the Qing dynasty.
The Qing dynasty (/ t ... The White Lotus Rebellion (1796–1804) confirmed official suspicions as did the Taiping Rebellion, which drew on millennial Christianity.
White Lotus Societies, Buddhist sects which became an influential secret societies in imperial China Red Turban Rebellion, a 1351–1368 rebellion that overthrew the Yuan dynasty; White Lotus Rebellion, a 1794–1804 rebellion during the Qing dynasty
Wang Nangxian (Chinese: 王 囊 仙; pinyin: Wáng Nángxiān; Bouyei: Waangz Naangzsianl; 1778–1798) was a female Chinese leader of the anti-Manchu White Lotus Rebellion along with Wang Cong'er during the reign of the Qing dynasty. Another female member of the rebellion along with Wang Cong'er, she declared herself divine and commanded her ...
Susan Naquin is an American historian.She is a professor emerita at Princeton University. [1]Naquin's research centers on the social and cultural history of late imperial and early modern China (1400-1900), focusing on topics such as millenarian peasant uprisings, families, rituals, pilgrimages, temples, the history of Beijing, and Qing material culture. [1]