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For example, after the Han various dynasties ruled parts of China until Yang Jian reunited the country and established the Sui Dynasty.
He made Yang Su and his sons Yang Guang the Prince of Jin and Yang Jun the Prince of Qin the commanders of the three main prongs of the operation, with Yang Guang in overall command.
As the Sui Dynasty ended and Tang Dynasty began, families with the surname of Su and Feng settled here at the source of a stream where kudzu flourished.
In 602 AD, the new Sui Dynasty emerged as the sole power in a unified China after having defeated the Liang Dynasty.
In 851, at the age of 17, he was also the first youngest Number One Scholar (in the imperial examination) in Chinese history since Sui Dynasty and the first Number One Scholar in Lingnan.
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.
The Japanese envoy to the Sui and T'ang Dynasties of China departed there, and it was also Japan's portal to the Silk Road.
Xiao Mohe, Chinese general of the Chen Dynasty and Sui Dynasty
Emperor Wen of Sui (541–604), founder and first emperor of China's Sui Dynasty