Southern and Northern Dynasties (420-589) | | Southern Dynasties: | Northern Dynasties: | | Song Qi Liang Chen This article is about China. ...
// Events End of the Jin Dynasty in China. ...
Events October 17 - The Adige River overflows its banks, flooding the church of St. ...
The Southern dynasties 南朝 (nanchao in pinyin: nan2 chao2) include Song Dynasty, Qi Dynasty, Liang Dynasty and Chen Dynasty whose capital were all at Jiankang See also:Chinese history, Southern and Northern Dynasty, Chinese sovereign ...
The Northern Dynasties (北朝 bei3 zhao1) included Northern Wei Dynasty, Eastern Wei Dynasty, Western Wei Dynasty, Northern Qi Dynasty, Northern Zhou Dynasty. ...
The Song Dynasty (宋朝, previous spelling Sung) (420-479) was first of the four Southern Dynasties in China, followed by the Qi Dynasty. ...
Qi Dynasty 齊朝 (479-502) was the second of Southern dynasties in China, followed by the Liang Dynasty. ...
Liang Dynasty (also: Leung in Cantonese,) æ¢æ (502-557) was the third of Southern dynasties in China, followed by the Chen Dynasty. ...
Chen Dynasty 鳿 (557-589) was the fourth and the last of the Southern dynasties in China, eliminated by the Sui Dynasty. ...
| Northern Wei Eastern Wei Western Wei Northern Qi Northern Zhou The Eastern Wei Dynasty followed the disintegration of the Northern Wei, and ruled northern China from 534 to 550. ...
The Northern Qi Dynasty was one of the Northern dynasties of Chinese history. ...
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Northern Wei Buddha Maitreya, 443 AD. The Northern Wei Dynasty (北魏 386-534) is most noted for the unification of northern China in 440, it was also heavily involved in funding the arts and many antiques and art works from this period have survived. Tokyo National Museum. ...
Tokyo National Museum. ...
Events The Burgundians create a kingdom on the banks of the Rhone Attila destroys Naissus. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (824x2003, 1602 KB) A Buddhist Stela from China, Northern Wei period, build in the early 6th century. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (824x2003, 1602 KB) A Buddhist Stela from China, Northern Wei period, build in the early 6th century. ...
Stele is also a concept in plant biology. ...
(5th century — 6th century — 7th century — other centuries) Events The first academy of the east the Academy of Gundeshapur founded in Persia by the Persian Shah Khosrau I. Irish colonists and invaders, the Scots, began migrating to Caledonia (later known as Scotland) Glendalough monastery, Wicklow Ireland founded by St. ...
For the processor, see Intel 80386. ...
Events January 1 - Decimus Theodorius Paulinus appointed consul, the last to hold this office in the West. ...
Events September 29 - Leo succeeds Sixtus as Pope. ...
In 493 AD the dynasty moved its capital from Datong to Luoyang and started the construction of the artificial Longmen Caves. More than 30,000 Buddhist images from the time of this dynasty have been found in the caves. Events February 25 - Odoacer agrees to a mediated peace with Theodoric the Great, and is later killed by him personally. ...
Alternative meaning: Datong (Taipei City), Datong (Company) Datong (Chinese: 大同, Hanyu Pinyin: Dàtóng, WG: Ta-tung) is a city in the northern Shanxi Province in China. ...
Luoyang(æ´é³) (Simplified Chinese: æ´é³; Traditional Chinese: æ´é½; pinyin: ) is a city in Henan province, China. ...
The Longmen Grottoes (ch. ...
Statues of Buddha such as this, the Tian Tan Buddha statue in Hong Kong, remind followers to practice right living. ...
It is thought the dynasty originated from the Tuoba clan of the non-Han Xianbei tribe. The Tuobas renamed themselves the Yuans as a part of systematic Sinicization. Tuoba (拓拔 pinyin Tuòbá) or To-pa in Wade-Giles was a clan of the Xianbei people. ...
Han Chinese (Simplified: 汉; Traditional: 漢; Pinyin: hàn) is a term which refers to the majority ethnic group within China and the largest single human ethnic group in the world. ...
The Xianbei (é®®å, written XiÄnbÄi in pinyin or Hsien-pei in Wade-Giles) is a significant nomadic people residing in modern Manchuria and eastern Mongolia before migrating into areas of the modern Chinese provinces of Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Hebei, Inner Mongolia, and Liaoning. ...
Sinicization, or less commonly Sinification, is to make things Chinese. ...
The official state religion was Taoism as a result of the influence of K'ou Ch'ien-chih. For other uses of the words tao and dao, see Dao (disambiguation). ...
Towards the end of the dynasty there was signicant internal dissidence resulting in a split into Eastern and Western Wei.
Sovereigns of the Northern Wei Dynasty | Posthumous Names ( Shi Hao 諡號) | Born Names | Period of Reigns | Era Names (Nian Hao 年號) and their according range of years | | Northern dynasty | | Northern Wei Dynasty 386-535 | | Convention: Northern Wei + posthumous name | | As a well known fact Tuoba family changed their family name to 元 (yuan2) during the reign of Xiaowen in 496 so we will also change from there. | | Emperor Daowu 道武帝 dao4 wu3 di4 | Tuoba Gui|拓拔珪 tou4 ba2 gui1 | 386-409 | Dengguo (登國 deng1 guo2) 386-396 Huangshi (皇始 huang2 shi3) 396-398 Tianxing (天興 tian1 xing1) 398-404 Tianci (天賜 tian1 ci4) 404-409 | | Emperor Mingyuan 明元帝 ming2 yuan2 di4 | Tuoba Si|拓拔嗣 tou4 ba2 si4 | 409-423 | Yongxing (永興 yong3 xing1) 409-413 Shenrui (神瑞 shen2 rui4) 414-416 Taichang (泰常 tai4 chang2) 416-423 | | Emperor Taiwu 太武帝 tai4 wu3 di4 | Tuoba Tao|拓拔燾 tou4 ba2 tao2 | 424-452 | Shiguang (始光 shi3 guang1) 424-428 Shenjia (神麚 shen2 jia1) 428-431 Yanhe (延和 yan2 he2) 432-434 Taiyan (太延 tai4 yan2) 435-440 Taipingzhenjun (太平真君 tai4 ping2 zhen1 jun1) 440-451 Zhengping (正平 zheng4 ping2) 451-452 | | 南安王 nan2 an1 wang2 | Tuoba Yu|拓拔余 tou4 ba2 yu2 | 452 | Yongping (永平 yong3 ping2) or Chengping (承平 cheng2 ping2) 452
| | Emperor Wencheng|文成帝 wen2 cheng2 di4 | Tuoba Jun|拓拔濬 tou4 ba2 jun4 | 452-465 | Xingan (興安 xing1 an1) 452-454 Xingguang (興光 xing1 guang1) 454-455 Taian (太安 tai4 an1) 455-459 Heping (和平 he2 ping2) 460-465 | | Emperor Xianwen 獻文帝 xian4 wen2 di4 | Tuoba Hong|拓拔弘 tou4 ba2 hong2 | 466-471 | Tianan (天安 tian1 an1) 466-467 Huangxing (皇興 huang2 xing1) 467-471 | | Emperor Xiaowen 孝文帝 xiao4 wen2 di4 | Yuan Hong|元宏 yuan2 hong2 | 471-499 | Yanxing (延興 yan2 xing1) 471-476 Chengming (承明 cheng2 ming2) 476 Taihe (太和 tai4 he2) 477-499 | | Emperor Xuanwu|宣武帝 xuan1 wu3 di4 | Yuan Ke|元恪 yuan2 ke4 | 500-515 | Jingming (景明 jing3 ming2) 500-503 Zhengshi (正始 zheng4 shi3) 504-508 Yongping (永平 yong3 ping2) 508-512 Yanchang (延昌 yan2 chang1) 512-515 | | Emperor Xiaoming孝明帝 xiao4 ming2 di4 | Yuan Xu|元詡 yuan2 xu3 | 516-528 | Xiping (熙平 xi1 ping2) 516-518 Shengui (神龜 shen2 gui1) 518-520 Zhengguang (正光 zheng4 guang1) 520-525 Xiaochang (孝昌 xiao4 chang1) 525-527 Wutai (武泰 wu3 tai4) 528 | | Emperor Xiaozhuang 孝莊帝 xiao4 zhuang1 di4 | Yuan Zi You|元子攸 yuan2 zi5 you1 | 528-530 | Jianyi (建義 jian4 yi4) 528 Yongan (永安 yong3 an1) 528-530 | | 長廣王 chang2 guang3 wang2 | Yuan Ye|元曄 yuan2 ye4 | 530-531 | Jianming (建明 jian4 ming2) 530-531
| | Emperor Juemin 節閔帝 jie2 min3 di4 | Yuan Gong|元恭 yuan2 gong1 | 531-532 | Putai (普泰 pu3 tai4) 531-532
| | 安定王 an1 ding4 wang2 | Yuan Lang|元朗 yuan2 lang3 | 531-532 | Zhongxing (中興 zhong1 xing1) 531-532
| | Emperor Xiaowu 孝武帝 xiao1 wu3 di4 | Yuan Xiu|元脩 yuan2 xiu1 | 532-535 | Taichang (太昌 tai4 chang1) 532 Yongxing (永興 yong3 xing1) 532 Yongxi (永熙 yong3 xi1) 532-535 | |