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The following is a partial list of people significant to the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) of Chinese history. Their romanised names start with the letter T. Their romanised names start with the letter T.
Therefore, certain people in the list who died before these years have their respective lords' names, in place of either of the three states, listed in the allegiance column. Take Guan Yu for example — he died before Liu Bei established Shu Han in 221, so his allegiance is listed as "Liu Bei" instead of "Shu Han".
The following is a partial list of people significant to the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) of Chinese history. Their romanised names start with the letter A. Their romanised names start with the letter A.
List of Chinese leaders; List of leaders of the People's Republic of China; List of people from Lishui; List of Chinese monarchs; List of emperors of the Liao dynasty; List of emperors of the Ming dynasty; List of emperors of the Qing dynasty; List of emperors of the Song dynasty; List of emperors of the Tang dynasty; List of leaders of the ...
Theophylact Simocatta, a Byzantine Greek historian during the reign of Heraclius (r. 610–641), wrote that Taugast (or Taugas; Old Turkic: Tabghach, from Tuoba, the Xianbei clan of Northern Wei), [32] was a great eastern empire in the Far East that ruled over Turkic people, with a capital city roughly 1,500 miles northeast from India that he ...
The following is a list of fictional people significant to the Three Kingdoms period (220–280) of China. The list includes characters in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong and those found in other cultural references to the Three Kingdoms period.
He convened a meeting with his brothers Li Longfan the Prince of Qi and Li Longye the Prince of Xue (who had changed their names to Li Fan and Li Ye by this point to observe naming taboo for Emperor Xuanzong), Guo Yuanzhen, along with a number of his associates – the general Wang Maozhong (王毛仲), the officials Jiang Jiao (姜皎) and Li ...
Baima people Jie: 羯 (Jié) Shanxi province Late 2nd century to mid-4th century No known equivalence N/A The majority died in the Ran Wei–Later Zhao war, the rest assimilated into Hans. Some Turkic people or Yeniseian people may be related to the Jie. Dian: 滇國 (diānguó) Dian Lake, Yunnan: 4th century BC to 1st century BC, assimilated ...