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Dong Wei Zhou Jingjing Dongxue (冬雪) Ai Yang Zhang Xinyue Cailian (採蓮) Yang Dong Xie Zhongling Ruolan (若蘭) Zheng Jiaxin Jenny Zhang: Empress Dowager Niohuru: Zhao Minfen Leanne Liu: Qing'er (晴兒) Wang Yan: Zanilia Zhao: Xiao Jian (簫劍) Zhu Hongjia Huang Xiaoming: Gao Ziqi Hanxiang (含香) Liu Dan Madina Memet Mengdan/Mai'erdan ...
Bo was romantically linked to actress Ma Xiaoqing, who had admitted in interviews prior to Bo's fall that she had been in a relationship with a high-ranking official. [186] In 2012, an American website Boxun baselessly reported that movie star Zhang Ziyi was paid $100 million to sleep with Bo and other top Chinese officials, a claim that was ...
Cao Wei: Wang Bi 王必: 218: General: Cao Cao ... Wei Huang 韋晃: 218: Han dynasty: Wei Ji ... Cao Wei, Eastern Wu: Wen Dai
Ce huang qi (1993) Cerf-volant du bout du monde (1958) Cha hua nu (1938) Chan dong de jin chi bang (1986) Chang ban po (1905) Chang men xian mu (1930) Changpai shan zhi zhan (1981) Chao guo jie xing dong (1986) Chaodao (2000) Chase Step by Step (1982 film) (1982) Chat gim (2005) Chau ji da Kuo min (1995) Che huo yi shi (1984) Che shui ma long ...
In the literature, Liu Bei initially appointed Guan Yu as General Who Destroys Rebels and Lord of Hanshou, Zhang Fei as General Who Subdues Rebels and Lord of Xin, Huang Zhong as General Who Conquers the West, Ma Chao as General Who Pacifies the West, and Zhao Yun General Who Guards the West, [1] and promoted them to "Five Tiger Generals" later.
Chi se Xiang Wei she (1982) Sha bao xiong di (1982) Zei xing (1982) Brothers from the Walled City (1982) San sheng wu nai shei de cuo (1982) The Fearless Jackal (1982) Lie mo zhe (1982) - Naiwen; Shou xing di yu nu (1982) Mie men zhi huo (1982) Dragon Blood (1982) - Ko Fei Hung; Shaolin Intruders (1983) - Abbot Jianxing; Mo (1983) The Pier ...
Huang–Lao is a portmanteau, with Huang being the Yellow Emperor, and Lao being Laozi. [4] The related Daoist name Daode Tianzun was a deification of Laozi as a reincarnated personification of the Dao. The term Huang-Lao first appears in the (109 – 91 BCE) Records of the Grand Historian, which was begun by Sima Tan and completed by his son ...
Wang Bi (Chinese: 王弼; 226–249 [2]), courtesy name Fusi (Chinese: 輔嗣), was a Chinese philosopher and politician. During his brief career, he produced commentaries on the Tao Te Ching and I Ching which were highly influential in Chinese philosophy .