X-Nico

unusual facts about Eastern Han Dynasty



Klotski

Huarong Dao (alternatively named Huarong Path or Huarong Trail, Chinese name: 華容道) is the Chinese variation, based on a fictitious story in the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms about the warlord Cao Cao retreating through Huarong Trail (in present-day Jianli County, Jingzhou, Hubei) after his defeat at the Battle of Red Cliffs in the winter of 208/209 CE during the late Eastern Han Dynasty.

Later Han Dynasty

Eastern Han Dynasty (25–220 CE), second period of the Chinese Han Dynasty

Lü Boshe

Lü Boshe (birth and death dates unknown) was an old acquaintance of Cao Cao, a prominent warlord who rose to power towards the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty and established the foundation of the state of Cao Wei in the Three Kingdoms period.

Meng Huo You

During the Eastern Han Dynasty, Chinese historian Ban Gu recorded in the geography section of his Book of Han that a flammable liquid substance are found in the Gao Nu County, located in the northeast portion of present day Shaanxi Province.

Red Hare

The Red Hare was a horse owned by the warlord Lü Bu in the late Eastern Han Dynasty.

Shamoke

Shamoke (died 222) was the king of the tribal people of the five valleys in Wuling during the late Eastern Han Dynasty and Three Kingdoms period of Chinese history.


see also

Dong Xuan

Dong Xuan (Han Dynasty) (董宣), style name Shaoping (少平), Eastern Han Dynasty official, see Book of the Later Han

Fengxian

Lü Bu (? - 198 AD), courtesy name Fengxian, Chinese military general during the late Eastern Han Dynasty

Jia Kui

Jia Kui (30-101) (賈逵), courtesy name Jingbo (景伯), Eastern Han Dynasty scholar and astronomer, see Yin Mo

Li Shan

Li Shan (Cisun), Eastern Han Dynasty official, author of the influential commentaries to the Wen Xuan anthology

Liu Hong

Emperor Ling of Han (156–189), personal name Liu Hong (劉宏), 12th emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty

Liu Long

Liu Long (Yuanbo) (劉隆; died 57), style name Yuanbo (元伯), Eastern Han Dynasty general, see Book of the Later Han

Emperor Shang of Han (105-106), name Liu Long (劉隆), Eastern Han Dynasty emperor

Liu Yi

Liu Yi (Eastern Han emperor) (劉懿; died 125), title Marquess of Beixiang (北鄉侯), briefly ruled as an emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty

Liu Zhi

Emperor Huan of Han (132–168), name Liu Zhi (劉志), Eastern Han Dynasty emperor

Ma Wu

Ma Wu (Zizhang) (馬武; died 61), style name Zizhang (子張), Eastern Han Dynasty general, see Book of the Later Han

Shiren

Shi Ren (士仁), a military general serving under the warlord Liu Bei during the Eastern Han Dynasty

Shuofang

First founded by Emperor Wu of Han in the wake of the successful reconquest of the area from Xiongnu tribes, it was dissolved during the late Eastern Han Dynasty and then reconstituted centuries later during the Northern Wei and Sui periods, before finally being dissolved during the Tang Dynasty.

Weifang

Emperor Shun of the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors period, the politician Yan Ying of the Spring and Autumn Period, the Confucian scholar Zheng Xuan of the Eastern Han Dynasty and the agriculturist Jia Simiao of the Northern Wei Dynasty were all from Weifang.

Yang Hong

Yang Hong (scholar) (陽鴻), style name Mengsun (孟孫), Eastern Han Dynasty scholar, see Book of the Later Han

Yang Qiu

Yang Qiu (Fangzheng) (陽球), style name Fangzheng (方正), Eastern Han Dynasty official, see Book of the Later Han

Yang Zhi

Yang Zhi (Sizu) (羊陟), style name Sizu (嗣祖), Eastern Han Dynasty official, see Book of the Later Han