Emperor Ai of Han, personal name Liu Xin (劉欣; 25 BC – 15 August 1 BC), was an emperor of China's Han dynasty. He ascended the throne when he was 20, having...
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Emperor Hui of Han (Chinese: 漢惠帝; pinyin: Hàn Huìdì; 210 BC – 26 September 188 BC), born Liu Ying (劉盈), was the second emperor of the Han dynasty. He was...
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Cheng-Han (simplified Chinese: 成汉; traditional Chinese: 成漢; pinyin: Chéng Hàn; 303 or 304 – 347) was a dynastic state of China listed as one of the Sixteen...
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of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada (lecture tapes were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi) <"Vajra Bhodi Sea" No.382, March 2002>...
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Western Han (206 BC – 9 AD and 23–25 AD) and the Eastern Han (25–220 AD). The rulers of the Shu Han, one of the three successor states to the Han dynasty...
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Emperor Ai (哀帝; Aidi; "The Lamentable Emperor") may refer to: Emperor Ai of Han (27BC–1BC, reigned 7BC–1BC), emperor of the Western Han dynasty Li Ban...
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posthumous titles mean simply "died young" and "the young emperor", and Aidi (哀帝), also known as Zhaoxuan (昭宣), neither of whom were awarded temple names)...
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Emperor Ai of Jin (redirect from Jin Aidi)
be moved back to Luoyang, where it had been until it had been captured by Han Zhao in 311. The imperial government, under an edict issued by Emperor Ai...
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dying in Assad's prisons". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 21, 2020. Aidi, Hisham (May 30, 2019). "How One Man Survived Syria's Gulag". The Nation...
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put on trial, at the Chalcedon Tribunal. July 10 – Sixteen Kingdoms: Jin Aidi, age 20, succeeds Jin Mudi, as emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. 361–363...
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