When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Shu Han - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shu_Han

    Han (漢; 221–263), known in historiography as Shu Han (蜀漢 [ʂù xân] ⓘ) or Ji Han (季漢 "Junior Han"), [2] or often shortened to Shu (Chinese: 蜀; pinyin: Shǔ; Sichuanese Pinyin: Su 2 < Middle Chinese: *źjowk < Eastern Han Chinese: *dźok [3]), was a dynastic state of China and one of the three major states that competed for supremacy over China in the Three Kingdoms period.

  3. Three Kingdoms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Kingdoms

    Strictly speaking, the Three Kingdoms, or independent states, only existed from the proclamation of the Eastern Wu ruler to be emperor in 229 until the downfall of Shu Han in 263. Interpretations of the period outside performative political acts push the beginning back into the later years of the Han, with the decline of the Han royal house.

  4. Rule of Wolves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_Wolves

    Shu Han's ruler, Queen Makhi Kir-Taban, plots to kill her sister Ehri from taking the throne when a blot of darkness with a likeness to the Shadow Fold spreads past the Unsea and into Shu Han. Nina Zenik has successfully infiltrated the Ice Court under the alias Mila Jandersdat, serving as Hanne Brum's courtier.

  5. Liu Shan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu_Shan

    Liu Shan (pronunciation ⓘ, 207–271), [1] [a] courtesy name Gongsi, was the second and last emperor of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period. As he ascended the throne at the age of 16, Liu Shan was entrusted to the care of the Chancellor Zhuge Liang and Imperial Secretariat Li Yan.

  6. List of Chinese monarchs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_monarchs

    Apart from ethnic Han rulers, China was also ruled by various non-Han monarchs, including Jurchen, Khitan, Manchu, Mongol and Tangut and many others. [20] To justify their reign, non-Han rulers sometimes aligned themselves with the Confucian sages or the Chakravarti of Chinese Buddhism . [ 5 ]

  7. Liu Bei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu_Bei

    Liu Bei (Chinese: 劉備, pronunciation ⓘ; Mandarin pronunciation: [ljǒʊ pêɪ]; 161 – 10 June 223), [3] courtesy name Xuande (玄德), was a Chinese warlord in the late Eastern Han dynasty who later became the founding emperor of Shu Han, one of the Three Kingdoms of China.

  8. Zhuge Liang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhuge_Liang

    Yi Zhongtian praised Shu Han as the best model of "rational rule" amongst the Three Kingdoms, and it is the incorruptibility and transparency of Zhuge Liang and his associates that kept Shu Han from collapsing under a heavy burden of expenditure. [32]: ch.42,48 Not everybody was happy with such Legalist policies.

  9. Family tree of Chinese monarchs (221 BCE – 453 CE) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_tree_of_Chinese...

    The Han dynasty was interrupted by the reign of the usurper Wang Mang, who declared the Xin dynasty (AD 9–23); on this basis, the Han dynasty is generally divided into the Western Han (206 BC – AD 9 and AD 23–25) and the Eastern Han (AD 25–220). The rulers of the Shu Han, one of the three successor states to the Han dynasty during the ...