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  2. Jian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jian

    The jian (Mandarin Chinese:, Chinese: 劍, English approximation: / dʒ j ɛ n / jyehn, Cantonese:) is a double-edged straight sword used during the last 2,500 years in China. The first Chinese sources that mention the jian date to the 7th century BCE, during the Spring and Autumn period; [1] one of the earliest specimens being the Sword of Goujian.

  3. Chinese sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_sword

    The jian is a double-edged straight sword used in China for the last 2,500 years. The first Chinese sources that mention the jian date to the 7th century BC during the Spring and Autumn period; [47] one of the earliest specimens being the Sword of Goujian.

  4. Hanjian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanjian

    The word hanjian is distinct from the general word for traitor, which could be used for any country or ethnicity. As a Chinese term, it is a digraph of the Chinese characters for "Han" and "traitor". Han is the majority ethnic group in China; and Jian, in Chinese legal language, primarily

  5. List of supernatural beings in Chinese folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_supernatural...

    Jian (Chinese: 聻; pinyin: jiàn; Wade–Giles: chien) refers to the "ghost" of a ghost. [27] Just as ghosts frighten men, ghosts of ghosts frighten ghosts. A story in volume 5 of Pu Songling's Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio contained the following line: "A person becomes a ghost after death, a ghost becomes a jian after death." [28]

  6. Jian (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jian_(disambiguation)

    Jian of Qi, the last king of the ancient Chinese state of Qi; Jian (bird), a bird in Chinese mythology; Jian (given name), Mandarin given name; Jian (surname), Mandarin pinyin of the name 簡/简; Jian (unit), a traditional unit of length and area in building large structures

  7. Names of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_China

    The name is thought to derive from the Chinese word for silk, 丝; 絲; sī; Middle Chinese sɨ, Old Chinese *slɯ, per Zhengzhang). It is itself at the origin of the Latin for 'silk', sērica . This may be a back formation from sērikos ( σηρικός ), 'made of silk', from sēr ( σήρ ), 'silkworm', in which case Sēres is 'the land ...

  8. Chinese swordsmanship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_swordsmanship

    The Chinese government has also promoted Chinese swordsmanship worldwide by sending trainers and training foreign learners. Since the 1980s, the Chinese Wushu Academy and the Chinese Wushu Association have set up many training camps overseas, attracting a large number of foreign learners to learn Chinese swordsmanship. Practitioners of Chinese ...

  9. Jian (sword breaker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jian_(sword_breaker)

    Jian (middle) depicted in Chinese military compendium Wujing Zongyao. The jian (simplified Chinese: 锏; traditional Chinese: 鐧; pinyin: jiǎn) or tie tian (鐵鐧 or 鐵簡, lit. 'iron slip'), also known as Chinese swordbreaker or Chinese truncheon, [1] is a type of quad-edged straight mace or club specifically designed to break weapons with sharp edges.