Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Video games set in the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period (2 P) H. Video games set in the Han dynasty (4 P) J. ... Video games set in the Qing dynasty (2 P) S.
Pages in category "Video games set in the Qing dynasty" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Shengguan Tu (simplified Chinese: 升官图; traditional Chinese: 陞官圖; pinyin: shēngguān tú), translated variously as Promoting Officials [1] and Table of Bureaucratic Promotion, [2] is an ancient Chinese board game that originated in the Tang dynasty, with the earliest historical record of a variant of it dating back to 836.
Prince of Qin (Chinese: 秦殇; pinyin: Qín Shāng) is a 2002 action role-playing game developed by Object Software and published by Strategy First.The story is set in China in the final years of the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC), with Fusu – the heir apparent to the first Qin emperor, Qin Shi Huang – as the protagonist.
Troops of the Wuwei Corps led by Yuan Shikai escorting Empress Dowager Cixi back to the Forbidden City in 1902. The Wuwei Corps [1] (simplified Chinese: 武 卫 军; traditional Chinese: 武 衛 軍; pinyin: Wǔwèijūn; Wade–Giles: Wu-wei chün) [2] or Guards Army [2] [3] was a combined modernised army corps of the Qing dynasty of China.
The structure of the Manchu mangfu worn in the Qing dynasty differed from those worn in the Ming dynasty as the mangfu worn in the Qing dynasty was modified based on the early male clothing of the Manchu, thus retaining the original features while making new changes to the robes; for example, the Manchu mangfu had horse hoof-shaped cuff. [10]
The Qing official headwear or Qingdai guanmao (Chinese: 清代官帽; pinyin: qīngdài guānmào; lit. 'Qing dynasty official hat'), also referred as the Official hats of the Qing dynasty [1] or Mandarin hat in English, [2] is a generic term which refers to the types of guanmao (Chinese: 官帽; pinyin: guānmào; lit. 'official hat'), a headgear, worn by the officials of the Qing dynasty in ...
Zeng Guofan, the leader of the Xiang Army. The Xiang Army or Hunan Army (Chinese: 湘軍; pinyin: Xiāng Jūn) was a standing army [citation needed] organized by Zeng Guofan from existing regional and village militia forces called tuanlian to contain the Taiping Rebellion in Qing China (1850 to 1864).