(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Emperador Wu ning Han - Wikipedia Jump to content

Emperador Wu ning Han

Ibat king Wikipedia
Liu Che
Emperador na ning Albugan Han Dynasty
Menungkulan 9 Marsu 141 BC – 29 Marsu 87 BC
Elilan Emperador Jing
Katuki Emperador Zhao
Empress Empress Chen Jiao (ひね嬌)
Empress Wei Zifu (まもるおっと)
Ának
Princess Wei the Eldest (まもるちょう公主こうしゅ)
Princess Yangshi (せき公主こうしゅ)
Princess Zhuyi (しょ邑公ぬし)
Liu Ju, Crown Prince Li (もど太子たいしりゅうよりどころ)
Liu Bo, Prince Ai of Changyi (あきら邑哀おうりゅう髆)
Liu Hong, Prince Huai of Qi (ひとしふところおうりゅう閎)
Liu Dan, Prince La of Yan (つばめとげおうりゅうだん)
Liu Xu, Prince Li of Guangling (廣陵こうりょう厲王りゅう胥)
Liu Fuling, Emperor Zhao (あきらみかどりゅうどるりょう)
Kumpletung lagyu
Lagiu Familia: Liu (りゅう)
Mumunang Lagiu: Zhi[lower-alpha 1] (彘), later Che[lower-alpha 2] (とおる)
Courtesy name: Tong[1] (つう)
Panaun
Jiànyuán けんもと (140 BC – 135 BC)
Yuánguāng もとひかり (134 BC – 129 BC)
Yuánshuò もとついたち(128 BC – 123 BC)
Yuánshòu もとかり (122 BC – 117 BC)
Yuándĭng もとかなえ (116 BC – 111 BC)
Yuánfēng もとふう (110 BC – 105 BC)
Tàichū 太初たいしょ (104 BC – 101 BC)
Tiānhàn 天漢てんかん (100 BC – 97 BC)
Tàishĭ ふとしはじめ (96 BC – 93 BC)
Zhēnghé せい (92 BC – 89 BC)
Hòuyuán もと (88 BC – 87 BC)
Posthumous name
Makuyad: Emperador Wu[lower-alpha 3] (たけみかど) "martial"
Kabilugan: Xiao Wu Huangdi[lower-alpha 4] (こうたけ皇帝こうてい) "filial and martial"
Lagyu ning templu
Shizong (むね)
Dynasty Albugan Han
Tata Emperador Jing ning Han
Ima Empress Wang Zhi (おう娡)
Mibait 10 Agostu 156 BC
Mete 29 Marsu 87 BC[2]

Ing Emperador Wu ning Han (simplified Chinese: 汉武みかど; traditional Chinese: かんたけみかど; pinyin: Hàn Wǔdì; Wade–Giles: Han Wu-ti; 156–87 BC), taganang lagiu Liu Che (りゅうとおる), iya ing pang pitung emperador na ning Han Dynasty ning Tsina, menungkulan manibat 141 BC anggang 87 BC. I Emperor Wu mayayalala ya bilang kareng mangalapad nang asakup a gabun iniang yang manungkulan, at makanian mu rin keng masikan ampong makapalibutad Confucian state a kayang tetag, keng amlat Isik bilang pekamasikan a emperador na ning Han dynasty ampong metung kareng pekamasikan a emperador agpang keng amlat ning Tsina. King kapamilatan ng Emperador Wung masusing pamangubiernu ing Han Dynasty meging yang metung kareng pekamasikan mabilug a yatu.[3]

I Emperor Wu sasamba ya keng Gintung Tau (o kaya Buddha) iniang 121 BC, Mogao Lungib, Dunhuang, ca. pang8 dilanua CE.
  1. This courtesy name is reported by Xun Yue(荀悅) (148–209),
    the author of Records of the Han Dynasty
    (かん), but other sources
    do not mention a courtesy name.
  2. Loewe, Michael (2005). Crisis and Conflict in Han China. Oxfordshire: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-36161-3. 
  3. Bo Yang's commentary in the Modern Chinese edition of Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 7, and Zhao Yi (ちょうつばさ)'s commentary included therein.


Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "lower-alpha", but no corresponding <references group="lower-alpha"/> tag was found