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Guo Yuan compared the scholar's handwriting with the handwriting in the pamphlets and saw that they were similar. He then arrested and questioned the scholar, who admitted that he was the culprit and confessed everything. [15] [1] Guo Yuan was later promoted to the position of Minister Coachman (太僕) in the imperial court. Although he was a ...
Yuan Mei was born in Qiantang (錢塘, in modern Hangzhou), Zhejiang province, to a cultured family who had never before attained high office.He achieved the degree of jinshi in 1739 at the young age of 23 and was immediately appointed to the Hanlin Academy (翰林院).
The Ravages of Time is a spinoff of the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.It tells the exploits of Liu Bei, Cao Cao, the Sun family, and other people from that period, from the point of view of the two main characters, Feng and Liaoyuan Huo, whose names collectively form the Chinese title of the manhua.
Guo Baokun: Guo Youzhi's son. Friend of the Crown Prince. Xiao Haoran: He Zongwei: An orator/lawyer who often argues cases in favour of the aristocrats, much to the disgust of the commoners. Han Jiunuo [25] Ye Ling'er: Lin Wan'er's friend and daughter of the head of the Garrison Li Shen [26] Gao Da: A guard escort accompanying Fan Xian to ...
Word Of Honor (Chinese: 山河令; pinyin: Shānhé lìng), previously titled A Tale of the Wanderers (天涯客), is a 2021 Chinese costume streaming television series co-produced by Ciwen Media, and Youku, directed by Cheng Zhi Chao, Ma Hua Gan, and Li Hong Yu, written by Xiao Chu, adapted from the danmei novel "Faraway Wanderers" (天涯客) by Priest.
However, his quest forces him to face Yuwen Tuo, a golden armored and masked warrior who single-handedly destroyed the Chen's armies at the age of 10 while wielding the legendary Xuan-Yuan Sword. Yuwen Tuo ( Hu Ge ), outwardly a ruthless warrior, is also the last prince of the fallen Northern Zhou dynasty.
The opening of the novel Wu Mei Yuan from a printed edition. Wu Mei Yuan [1] or Wumei yuan [2] (traditional Chinese: 五美緣; simplified Chinese: 五美缘), translated into English as the Destinies of Five Beauties, [3] is a Chinese romantic novel of the early 19th-century during the Qing dynasty.
Ji Yun left behind a book entitled Notes of the Thatched Abode of Close Observations (閱微草堂筆記) [2] and another book named Wenda Gong Yiji (紀文達公遺集; "Collected Works of Lord Wenda", i.e. Ji Xiaolan), which was edited by later generations. He was often mentioned with Yuan Mei as the "Nan Yuan Bei Ji" (Chinese: 南袁北紀; lit.