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Chinese History - Han Dynasty æ¼¢ event history (www.chinaknowledge.de) (8024 words) |
 | The army reform of Emperor Wudi lead to the stationing of garrisons throughout the empire, in the capitals of the commanderies (jun é¡), from 111 on the standing army was organized in eight commanderies (xiaowei æ ¡å°). |
 | Emperor Wudi had the obsession to be cursed by witchcraft and to be the victim of political plots of the feudal princes and their consultants ("clients" binke è³å®¢, "wandering knights" youxia éä¿ ). |
 | A state as large as Han China after the expansion to the west, south and northeast (see next chapter) lacked junior staff for the many civil offices in the capital and throughout the empire. |
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Qwika - similar:Han_Dynasty (1026 words) |
 | Han Zhaodi (漢昭帝) Family name:Liu (劉 liú) Given name:Fuling (弗陵;, fúlíng) Posthumous name:(full)Xiaozhao (孝昭, xiào zhāo)"filial and accomplished" Posthumous name:(short)Zhao (昭, zhāo)"accomplished" Emperor Zhao of Han (94 BC–74 BC) was an emperor of the Chinese Han Dynasty from 87 BC to 7... |
 | Han Jingdi (漢景帝) Family name:Liu (劉 liú) Given name:Qi (啟 or 啔 qĭ) Posthumous name:(full)Xiaojing (孝景, xiào jĭng)"filial and decisive" Posthumous name:(short)Jing (景, jĭng)"decisive" Emperor Jing of Han (188 BC–141 BC) was an emperor of China in the Han Dynasty from 156 BC to 141 BC. |
 | Han Huidi (漢惠帝) Family name:Liu (劉 liú) Given name:Ying (盈 yíng) Dates of reign:195 BC–188 BC Posthumous name:(full)Xiaohui (孝惠, xiào hùi)"filial and benevolent" Posthumous name:(short)Hui (惠, hùi) Emperor Hui of Han (210 BC–188 BC) was the second emperor of the Han Dynasty in China. |